Free: Contests & Raffles.
If you shoot one in the elk area and it crosses into no elk area. First mark where you were and elk was. Mark any blood trail.Then get on the phone to a game agent and let him know what happen. He will advise you on what you could do. I had this happen to me and it worked out just fine.Even if you can’t reach one a call to 911 indicates you were trying to do the right thing.Everyone packs a phone now days. You think you are alone but there is always someone who will make the call on you. Proceed with caution.
Assuming both units / areas you are talking about are public access (legally)....I would mark the blood trail and go retrieve my elk. If the elk was on private or otherwise on land that was not public access....I would attempt making calls to gain access, then I would go retrieve my elk. If I was remotely worried about it, I would not hunt that close to the boundary / border.
I have found some elk in an any elk unit but it is very close to another one that is not any elk. Less than a few football fields close. If a legal elk in the one unit I potentially shoot were to either require a follow up shot or expire in the other unit where it is not legal, how would I proceed?
I had this happen in a different state. Bad shot led to tracking a deer across a road (also the boundary) and a game warden coincidentally drove by while I was following the trail on the wrong side of the road (open to public), thinking I was hunting where I shouldn't be.I had already put my rifle back in the car and I was marking blood on my GPS. I showed him the GPS track, and he seemed to decide my story was credible and didn't have any problem with me. If didn't have a GPS track and I hadn't put the gun away, I'm not sure he would have believed me.This anecdote is only worth what you're paying me for it. If you're concerned about a certain scenario, it might be worth a call to a game warden beforehand to make sure it's all good. There's quite a bit of grey area and discretion involved in these enforcement scenarios, but if you're relying on info the game warden gave you beforehand, my guess is that you'll be pretty safe.
Quote from: jamesfromseattle on September 04, 2025, 10:22:00 AMI had this happen in a different state. Bad shot led to tracking a deer across a road (also the boundary) and a game warden coincidentally drove by while I was following the trail on the wrong side of the road (open to public), thinking I was hunting where I shouldn't be.I had already put my rifle back in the car and I was marking blood on my GPS. I showed him the GPS track, and he seemed to decide my story was credible and didn't have any problem with me. If didn't have a GPS track and I hadn't put the gun away, I'm not sure he would have believed me.This anecdote is only worth what you're paying me for it. If you're concerned about a certain scenario, it might be worth a call to a game warden beforehand to make sure it's all good. There's quite a bit of grey area and discretion involved in these enforcement scenarios, but if you're relying on info the game warden gave you beforehand, my guess is that you'll be pretty safe.While I understand what you're saying I tend to follow the rule, the less they know the better(even when 100% legal) if you call and ask these questions they have record of you doing so, they may tend to believe you're planning on doing something wrong and getting all the info you need to get away with it. Then if it happens, and you call them it's pretty coincidental IMO. This could be completely out of line but I'd rather just hunt and go about my business legally and deal with anything that may arise when it happens.