Free: Contests & Raffles.
Depending on the area, driving roads is very effective at locating animals. Either by directly seeing them or seeing fresh tracks. They can have large ranges without a definite pattern. They can be there one day and be miles away the next or they can camp out in one spot for days. You can burn a lot of boot time and never cross paths with an animal.Calling works so well because they come to you or answer back. You can call and hear them from a long ways away then head towards them. If it is not the rut though you are stuck guessing, hiking, glassing or driving. Where I hunt there is not a lot of visibility from one canyon to the next. Heavy timber or reprod reduces it even more.I seriously doubt guys are jumping out and shooting elk while it just stands there and watches them. If you see them you keep driving but once they are located you can come up with a game plan to put a stalk on them or head them off. At least you know where they are and have an idea of which way they are headed.
Quote from: Kain on December 16, 2013, 07:48:17 PMDepending on the area, driving roads is very effective at locating animals. Either by directly seeing them or seeing fresh tracks. They can have large ranges without a definite pattern. They can be there one day and be miles away the next or they can camp out in one spot for days. You can burn a lot of boot time and never cross paths with an animal.Calling works so well because they come to you or answer back. You can call and hear them from a long ways away then head towards them. If it is not the rut though you are stuck guessing, hiking, glassing or driving. Where I hunt there is not a lot of visibility from one canyon to the next. Heavy timber or reprod reduces it even more.I seriously doubt guys are jumping out and shooting elk while it just stands there and watches them. If you see them you keep driving but once they are located you can come up with a game plan to put a stalk on them or head them off. At least you know where they are and have an idea of which way they are headed. Yep...all that, or if you took the time to scout and be serious about your hunt, you could just walk in to your stand and spend the day waiting for them to arrive..........you can either make it happen and risk spooking the animals to hell and gone, or let it happen, I prefer calm animals.
I'd like to know how you can tell someone is road hunting just because they're driving on a road during hunting season? I mean that's the purpose of trucks and the roads that we drive them on. Just seeing a truck driving the roads doesn't mean that's all they're going to do all day. And even if they do, maybe there's a reason for it. Like a disabled person in the vehicle? Or maybe not even to that extreme, maybe it's a couple of young, healthy guys that hiked 15 miles the day before and their feet are all blistered up.