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My first suggestion is to not plan on moose hunting in WA. When you factor in the dwindling number of tags, applicants, points, etc, the percentage of people who draw an OIL tag in their life for a bull is very small.
Quote from: NRA4LIFE on October 27, 2020, 02:46:53 PMMy first suggestion is to not plan on moose hunting in WA. When you factor in the dwindling number of tags, applicants, points, etc, the percentage of people who draw an OIL tag in their life for a bull is very small. I would agree. Odds are very low, at the current tag level it takes about 20 points before you have a 1% chance of drawing. With max points in the easiest to draw unit the odds are steady at about 2%, assuming tags hold level (they are down almost 50% in 4 years).The best strategy if one wants to hunt moose is to figure out what states have draws and apply there as well as Canada. I think Minnesota or somewhere back there had decent odds, at least compared to here. The strategy I would use is to apply everywhere I could afford and reasonably hunt.
I'd rather have one late moose tag than two early ones. Moose are exponentially more visible in late October through November
I'd rather see what I'm hunting and glass for "the bull" when they're in the cuts; rather that than get excited and shoot a dink bull. Now were it a non OIL tag, I might feel different.To answer your question, yes our moose are rutting. Saw a bull shot today that was with a cow. Another bull didn't let me sleep for two nights with his grunting. This week was tough seeing a cow without a bull
ANY moose tag you can get you take and feel SUPER lucky to get it .