Get in shape and stay hydrated. You need to drink a lot more water out west.
Booze will be more effective. I’d stay away from it for the first few days if not the entire trip.
My last elk hunt was in a moderately pressured unit. Bulls would bugle early and then shut up. We started listening and working towards them a couple hours before daylight. Try to be close when the sun comes up and strike. If you waited for daylight, you would never hear them enough to get close.
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In my experience you will know when it’s an elk bugling.
We say any elk is a good elk in an OTC unit. My first elk hunt, I had a cow and calf in spear range on day one. Passed them up thinking I’d kill a bull. I didn’t see another elk until 2 weeks later.
If it’s a draw unit, I’d shoot anything that looks like a decent bull. If they are everywhere I might pass a rag horn. But I wouldn’t be guessing a score to make a decision on a decent racked bull. Most of my elk hunts I end up with 1 good chance to an kill elk. Sometime I blew it and a couple times I didn’t. I’ll pass white tails but passing elk is a different thing.
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Yeah, I wasn’t going to post this, but some reader might get some use some day.
https://www.elk101.com/features/shot-placement-feature/
Every critter is different and shot placement is a critical step in the taking of any game. So this is a little info on shot placement on an elk. Very similar to a whitetail...with much larger bones!
I ain’t even gonna try and act like I know what you’re taking about. I get it in simple terms, heavy go slow but hit hard... I also know I wouldn’t want to be throwing the rages I use at them. Much bigger boned critter here and penetration is needed, not an area rage is known for. I’d also want a fixed blade because a lot can happen in 7 yards, let alone 70!
You taking that Strother?