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North Idaho gets hammered by hunters anymore. Needle in a haystack for mule deer and whitetail areas are getting overcrowded as well. Waiting for another down turn in the economy to cut down on hunters that have $20,000 side by sides with tracks.I agree with idahohuntr on driving south to hunt some quality areas for mule deer
Quote from: JM on November 12, 2019, 09:08:49 PMNorth Idaho gets hammered by hunters anymore. Needle in a haystack for mule deer and whitetail areas are getting overcrowded as well. Waiting for another down turn in the economy to cut down on hunters that have $20,000 side by sides with tracks.I agree with idahohuntr on driving south to hunt some quality areas for mule deerI don’t have 20k for that crap. I have horses and mules. Save all year for these out of state hunts. I used to hunt Idaho for elk every year but got tired of seeing idiots from Washington. This is my final year hunting in Washington. I haven’t killed a mule deer in this state for about 8 years now. The quality and numbers are gone in the areas where I used to hunt. I worked in Idaho and Montana for a few years falling timber. The country in western Montana and North Idaho is very much the same in the sense of what I hunted here in Washington. Steep high country is my MO for mule deer. Just have to treat it as a high buck hunt knowing numbers are low and the chance at a big mountain muley will always be my holy grail. I’ve shot far more whitetail then mule deer. Generally because I’ve always opted to let the smaller bucks walk. Now I’m lucky to have even seen a doe. I’m not even planning on applying for the OIL tags here anymore. I’m not after anyone’s spot. I’m plenty good at finding my own. That being said the Cabinets are about as rough as it gets for mule deer hunting. The bucks I’ve killed in there virtually live in sheep country. The weather is generally your worst enemy. Between snow and fog. Idaho’s side of the cabinets will likely be where I’ll be. Just wondering what the # of people are like in there? Deer numbers? The big bears are thick in parts of Montana I hunt I’d imagine Idaho is no different. 3 guys and 6 animals. I’ll likely be the only one with a tag for Idaho.
Quote from: Lapua07 on November 13, 2019, 05:49:11 AMQuote from: JM on November 12, 2019, 09:08:49 PMNorth Idaho gets hammered by hunters anymore. Needle in a haystack for mule deer and whitetail areas are getting overcrowded as well. Waiting for another down turn in the economy to cut down on hunters that have $20,000 side by sides with tracks.I agree with idahohuntr on driving south to hunt some quality areas for mule deerI don’t have 20k for that crap. I have horses and mules. Save all year for these out of state hunts. I used to hunt Idaho for elk every year but got tired of seeing idiots from Washington. This is my final year hunting in Washington. I haven’t killed a mule deer in this state for about 8 years now. The quality and numbers are gone in the areas where I used to hunt. I worked in Idaho and Montana for a few years falling timber. The country in western Montana and North Idaho is very much the same in the sense of what I hunted here in Washington. Steep high country is my MO for mule deer. Just have to treat it as a high buck hunt knowing numbers are low and the chance at a big mountain muley will always be my holy grail. I’ve shot far more whitetail then mule deer. Generally because I’ve always opted to let the smaller bucks walk. Now I’m lucky to have even seen a doe. I’m not even planning on applying for the OIL tags here anymore. I’m not after anyone’s spot. I’m plenty good at finding my own. That being said the Cabinets are about as rough as it gets for mule deer hunting. The bucks I’ve killed in there virtually live in sheep country. The weather is generally your worst enemy. Between snow and fog. Idaho’s side of the cabinets will likely be where I’ll be. Just wondering what the # of people are like in there? Deer numbers? The big bears are thick in parts of Montana I hunt I’d imagine Idaho is no different. 3 guys and 6 animals. I’ll likely be the only one with a tag for Idaho.You're going to run into even more idiots from Washington hunting deer in North Idaho than you did hunting elk. If you've got stock head south, the I-5 crowd gets pretty scared if they have to get out of their pickup to hunt.
Before I offer up anything I would have to know if you fell with a Stihl or Husky, Drive a Ford or Chevy, Ride a horse or mule.
Quote from: theleo on November 13, 2019, 07:47:21 AMQuote from: Lapua07 on November 13, 2019, 05:49:11 AMQuote from: JM on November 12, 2019, 09:08:49 PMNorth Idaho gets hammered by hunters anymore. Needle in a haystack for mule deer and whitetail areas are getting overcrowded as well. Waiting for another down turn in the economy to cut down on hunters that have $20,000 side by sides with tracks.I agree with idahohuntr on driving south to hunt some quality areas for mule deerI don’t have 20k for that crap. I have horses and mules. Save all year for these out of state hunts. I used to hunt Idaho for elk every year but got tired of seeing idiots from Washington. This is my final year hunting in Washington. I haven’t killed a mule deer in this state for about 8 years now. The quality and numbers are gone in the areas where I used to hunt. I worked in Idaho and Montana for a few years falling timber. The country in western Montana and North Idaho is very much the same in the sense of what I hunted here in Washington. Steep high country is my MO for mule deer. Just have to treat it as a high buck hunt knowing numbers are low and the chance at a big mountain muley will always be my holy grail. I’ve shot far more whitetail then mule deer. Generally because I’ve always opted to let the smaller bucks walk. Now I’m lucky to have even seen a doe. I’m not even planning on applying for the OIL tags here anymore. I’m not after anyone’s spot. I’m plenty good at finding my own. That being said the Cabinets are about as rough as it gets for mule deer hunting. The bucks I’ve killed in there virtually live in sheep country. The weather is generally your worst enemy. Between snow and fog. Idaho’s side of the cabinets will likely be where I’ll be. Just wondering what the # of people are like in there? Deer numbers? The big bears are thick in parts of Montana I hunt I’d imagine Idaho is no different. 3 guys and 6 animals. I’ll likely be the only one with a tag for Idaho.You're going to run into even more idiots from Washington hunting deer in North Idaho than you did hunting elk. If you've got stock head south, the I-5 crowd gets pretty scared if they have to get out of their pickup to hunt.My experience with hunting mule deer in the areas that aren’t know as high producing muley country (I.E. NE Washington is well known whitetail country. As is N. Idaho. N. Western Montana is about a 50/50 split seems to me as the potential of a big whitetail is as possible as a big mule deer.) This all being said many have continued to express the urge to deter my interests to southern Idaho. I’m not interested in anything south of CDA. I’ve hunted out of St. Marie’s seen a few muleys while elk hunting. Hunted the CDA’s. Few muleys in there too. Worked up around Priest, Sandpoint, Bonners, and Moyie. There’s deer there. A lot like some of the skirts of what I’ve hunted in Montana the last 4-5 years. If I wanted easy deer I’d hunt the wheat country here in Washington. With easy comes over populated hunters.
Quote from: 2MANY on November 13, 2019, 10:59:59 AMBefore I offer up anything I would have to know if you fell with a Stihl or Husky, Drive a Ford or Chevy, Ride a horse or mule.Lapua, consider yourself lucky if he swipes right after those answers.