Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: washelkhntr on June 01, 2014, 08:05:22 PMQuote from: Johnb317 on June 01, 2014, 08:02:30 PMDog hair reprod? Hell on earth!10X wetter than rain!!!!!
Quote from: Johnb317 on June 01, 2014, 08:02:30 PMDog hair reprod? Hell on earth!
Dog hair reprod?
Quote from: deerhunter_98520 on June 01, 2014, 05:28:46 PMWith so many roads on the westside its hard to go steep and deep...they tend to stay where they don't get harassed...that could be 50 yds off the road all season or 500yds off the road....I bumped a herd 3 times in 4 days from the same spot 75 yds off the road last yearYep, a classic westside mistake is to go too far too early. With the amount of roads over here you can often leave the truck in prime elk country.
With so many roads on the westside its hard to go steep and deep...they tend to stay where they don't get harassed...that could be 50 yds off the road all season or 500yds off the road....I bumped a herd 3 times in 4 days from the same spot 75 yds off the road last year
I do a lot of scouting on Google Earth and look for draw or drainages between the roads. I've got quite a few bulls within 50 yds or so of the creeks; bedded down. I try to work downhill but I'll go uphill or sidehill depending on the wind. I like the timber as they seem to bed down there alot. Sometimes the brush looks pretty thick under the timber but you'll get a bit off the road and find that it opens up to make it a pretty good hunt. If I'm following a drainage I'll try to get close enough to the bottom that I can see the other side and spend a lot of time glassing as I'm going. It's not a horse race. They can be sneaky as hell. I always carry a cow call and have stopped a few bulls after I busted them by just running after them and calling. I stopped 2 bulls 3 times on one hunt before I got a shot at the rear bull. He was the bigger of the 2, a 5x5, but there was a 4x4 ahead of him. I took the 5x5 home that year.