Free: Contests & Raffles.
Fascinating stuff you are on to. Good work! I don't hunt elk much anymore but want to see your stuff just to learn.As a lifetime hobby I've called more than 30 kinds of critters to me, and learned a few patterns that carry over across several species. A major factor, that you are learning and exploiting, is what different vocals made by the same species are saying. Too often folks assume that by using a vocal they can call an animal from that species, but almost all species make a number of sounds that mean different things. Use the wrong vocal and the critter may run away instead of coming to you. That's not because you made the sound wrong but because of what it is saying! Another factor that has interested me with elk is the wide variety of "voices" of different elk making the same sound, like tenors and basses among humans. Bulls bugling that I have heard, some of them at the same time, have ranged from the high clean picolo, to steer bellows, deep donkey braying and to one ancient bull I killed that made a wheezing sound like a 90 year old man with emphasyma. When hunting an area for sveral days, you can identify specific bulls by their individual voice. My grandson and I have heard the same bull for the past two years, distinguished by his bugle that sounds more like a roar than a classic bugle. My grandson named him Katy Perry two years ago after her song, ROAR. Last Fall I was sitting on a dawn ridge listening with him when a bull roared from deep in the canyon below us and he said, "That's Katy Perry!"Hope my nattering does not distract from your thread.