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Author Topic: Tracking Tips 101  (Read 7096 times)

Offline Jonathan_S

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #15 on: March 09, 2016, 08:33:55 AM »
Go very slowly.  With every animal that I've had to really track without blood, I slow down and crawl, spending sometimes several minutes at a spot.  I'll sit and think, "if I were hurting, feeling sick and scared..."  Every time I have done this, I have recovered the animal. 

Once I did this on a liver hit whitetail buck that went and died in the September sun and lay there for 3 hrs.  Man oh man was he swollen like a sick pup.  If I had waited like they do in the movies, he'd have been rotten.

Don't say, "well wounded animals always move down hill or always to water" because eventually you will find a buck, bull, or bear because it broke one of those rules and ran straight up a mountainside or away from a creek bottom.
Kindly do not attempt to cloud the issue with too many facts.

Offline Okanagan

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #16 on: March 09, 2016, 09:26:03 AM »
Check the underside of branches and ferns for blood.  Sometimes elk as it walks will brush up against branches and and sort leaving blood on the underside.

Where the blood drips/spurts/smears are in relation to tracks can indicate accurately where the animal is hit:  left side; through wound bleeding from both sides; smearing only on the underside of limbs the elk passed under; blood consistently in one hoof track; paintbrushing logs and brush with sternum/chest; etc.

We tracked a wounded bull for 8 1/2 hours in western WA and during the entire time found only two tracks made in dirt (where he had stepped on gopher mounds) and hardly ever a drop of blood on the ground.  It was all smears on the underside of brush.  The bull was not hurt badly and we saw him several times later that winter, with a mussed up scar spot high on his withers where he was hit but otherwise OK.

With multiple trackers you can move ahead faster on marginal "spoor" (always wanted to use that word  :chuckle:)  One man works carefully from the last spot of sign, which as said needs to be marked with TP or something, while the other man roams ahead on the most likely route and scans places where the animal likely passed.  Sometimes you can jump the track ahead by 100 yards. while not losing the continuous trail of sign if you don't find sign way out ahead. 




Offline MagKarl

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #17 on: March 09, 2016, 10:31:18 AM »
I absolutely love trailing.  Be patient, things can get infinitely more challenging if the animal gets bumped.  I'd rather wait a couple hours and find them dead than push too soon and spend all day searching after the blood peters out.  That said, I'm prepared to work at night, I hate the TV hits where they leave them overnight and show daylight trophy recovery footage. 

Offline Jonathan_S

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #18 on: March 09, 2016, 10:48:29 AM »
I absolutely love trailing. 

The only time this is true for me is broad daylight in fresh snow with a yard-wide swath of lung blood  :chuckle:
Kindly do not attempt to cloud the issue with too many facts.

Offline BULLBLASTER

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #19 on: March 09, 2016, 03:15:24 PM »
I absolutely love trailing. 

The only time this is true for me is broad daylight in fresh snow with a yard-wide swath of lung blood  :chuckle:
Way better than tracking the yellow trail through fresh snow  :hello:

Offline blackveltbowhunter

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #20 on: March 09, 2016, 04:08:09 PM »
Take in the big picture. Its easy in a tracking job to get tunnel vision into this strategy or that. Sometimes it pays to stop and assess where the animal has taken you and evaluate all clues you have available.

Its been mentioned, but noting blood patterns is huge IMO.

If you are unable to locate your arrow in an area where recovery is likely, suspect that it may still be inside the animal Blood sign can help to confirm this.

One I dont see mentioned much is the perfect shot. Or nearly perfect shot. Often times great shots bleed very little. If a double lung shot is a bit high, the bull may death sprint and die and lose very little if any blood. This can be very important  with darkness approaching. And is the one time, I will regularly violate the wait rule.  AT the very least mark ALL locations where you shot, and exactly where the elk was as well as direction of travel if possible. It is easy to track blood in the dark, but very hard to keep track of your surroundings. This is compounded when in unfamiliar terrain. Often par for the course on an elk hunt. If the elk didnt bleed you may have a large area to grid and will need these key pieces to get started.

 

Offline coachcw

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #21 on: March 09, 2016, 04:38:21 PM »
big animals leave tracks and there's always blood some where . if it makes it 300 plus yards expect a mile . I like to use two guys and have one guy stay at last blood and move slow on the trail while I jump ahead in the direction of travel or a easy route , you can save hours doing this .

Offline KFhunter

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #22 on: March 09, 2016, 04:45:30 PM »
sharp eyes, wear your glasses or contacts (eyes getting older, middle aged  :chuckle: )

As a kid I used to track coyotes, bears, coons all manner of critters just for fun.  Didn't shoot them, would just cut their tracks and follow them for miles often bumping the animals.  Coyotes used to double back and lay up watching me come along then take off again, often times they'd double back on their own tracks and jump up a ways trying to loose me. Lot of times I'd only see grass blades just starting to stand back up after being pressed down by a pad.  I've found plenty of shot deer by nothing more than my nose.

It was great fun, I didn't have xbox.  My advice, do it a lot and have very sharp eyes. 

« Last Edit: March 09, 2016, 04:54:18 PM by KFhunter »

Offline Okanagan

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #23 on: March 09, 2016, 04:52:59 PM »
A compass can be a huge help if the shot is across a canyon or across a river, lake or difficult terrain.  Always mark the spot from which you shot (something I have forgotten to do in the excitement of the moment a few times).  If a wounded animal goes out of sight over a ridge line or into a wall of brush or timber on the other side of a lake, take a compass bearing from where you are to where the animal disappeared.  Hang an orange vest or something visible when looking back from the spot where the animal went out of sight.  Then then take the easiest route around to that spot, without concern about keeping that spot in view so you don't lose it.  Once on the other side, walk along the ridge line, edge of brush etc. where the animal disappeared while holding the compass and line up a reverse compass bearing to the orange vest marker.  At that point you should be within a step or two of the tracks and blood trail.

I did this on a mule deer that crossed a ridge out of sight well over a quarter mile away across a DEEP and extremely difficult canyon.   The buck's tracks showing blood were within 6 feet and his trail followed easily from that point. 

Shortcuts:  I don't calculate a reverse bearing but simply line up using the south end of the needle when looking back.  Also, declination is irrelevant.  Just take a bearing from magnetic north.

 
« Last Edit: March 09, 2016, 07:28:13 PM by Okanagan »

Offline Duckslayer0513

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #24 on: March 09, 2016, 08:08:31 PM »
Wait awhile after the shot. Shot a spike a few years ago, long story short I thought I had made a good shot and proceeded to track him after only 5 minutes. Found pools of blood. Even found some bone fragments In the blood. After 6 hours of tracking on a good blood trail the whole time we never did find him. I think if we had waited an hour we would've found him dead, instead of pushing him. Went back the next few days and never did find him..

Offline buglebrush

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #25 on: March 09, 2016, 10:45:51 PM »
I thought of one other thing.   Listen intently for several minutes after the shot.  Many clues are missed by all the high-fiving, and celebration.   A couple years ago we shot a bull that took off to the north.   Blood totally ended after 70 yards.  We looked for hours and hours.   Finally found him way to the south and below us.   Totally opposite from where he headed at first, and it was all because we had heard a single crash down there about five minutes later.   

Also if you shoot a bull with a little group of cows they will sometimes bed down right where he lays to die.   If you jump cows go look in the direction they came from.   

Offline police women of America

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #26 on: March 10, 2016, 11:22:22 PM »
Blood trail stopped?  Wrap that white TP in your pack around your hand and sweep the brush with it checking for that little speck. It's a trick that has put me back on the trail several times and almost everyone carries it with them.
Very good advice! Ill be using that trick this year. :tup:
Hi, my name is Josie

Offline Jonathan_S

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #27 on: March 11, 2016, 07:34:03 AM »
I thought of one other thing.   Listen intently for several minutes after the shot.  Many clues are missed by all the high-fiving, and celebration.   A couple years ago we shot a bull that took off to the north.   Blood totally ended after 70 yards.  We looked for hours and hours.   Finally found him way to the south and below us.   Totally opposite from where he headed at first, and it was all because we had heard a single crash down there about five minutes later.   

Also if you shoot a bull with a little group of cows they will sometimes bed down right where he lays to die.   If you jump cows go look in the direction they came from.

Years and years ago when I was a sprout, I was along on a hunt where my dad killed a coastal cow.  I big old lead cow and she was liver hit and she bobbed and weaved through a blackberry jungle...then circled back around and died in the original clearcut where she'd been hit  :chuckle:

Same situation, blood ran out about 200 yards from where she finally bedded.  The rest of the group got up and ran, we went to investigate and there she was.

Good tip  :tup:
Kindly do not attempt to cloud the issue with too many facts.

Offline AKBowman

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Re: Tracking Tips 101
« Reply #28 on: March 12, 2016, 07:02:56 AM »
I like to have my GPS in hand at all times so I can look at the path already traveled. This works well if you lose sign and need to try to anticipate where the animal may have gone next. Obviously necessary if you are trying to grid an area and pick up sign. I've found wounded elk or deer won't double back while a wounded or mortally hit bear bear will make a big circle.

Also like some have said, slow down and listen to your instincts.
"All you can do is hunt” - Roy Roth

 


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