Free: Contests & Raffles.
This year will be my first hunting season and I just want to make sure I don't find myself out in the woods with a dead animal that I could never haul out on my own.
Someone on another forum mentioned that in some states it is illegal to bone out an elk where it is killed, and that I might be required to haul out the entire carcass. Anyone know if that is true of Washington?
So is this legal in Washington for deer and elk? I asked in the boning thread but haven't gotten a response.
I may be way off base here, but have you considered going after a deer in the backcountry before taking an elk? Packing out a deer by yourself can give you some valuable experience at what it takes to pack, and give you an idea of what your limits are for an elk. If you pack out eighty pounds of deer meat five miles from the truck it will give you a reference of how far from the truck you should be hunting elk, before you end up with one on the ground eight miles back that you are responsible for packing out. For elk hunting a good pack frame is a necessity, and a good friend is priceless. When I pack an elk out the best packframe I've used is a sawbuck, and my best friend is my Tennessee walker .
Lot of good advise in this thread. I have hunted elk and deer for a lot of years now. Here is one thing I have found, elk is not an animal you want to try and get out by yourself. I have been involved in taking a lot of elk out of the woods. They are a big heavy animal and by yourself (if your a long way back in), unless the weather is cold you would be hard pressed to get all the meat out without spoilage.Depending on where the elk goes down I have seen it take 2 or 3 guys to get a bull moved around for gutting or boning out. One time I made the mistake of packing out a hind quarter unboned 12 miles. I could not hardly walk the next day and that was only 1/4 of the animal. I think I was around 25 at the time weighed around 220 and could run the 1.5 mile in about 10 minutes. Today I imagine I would not even make it out. I am pretty sure that if I had been by myself that even though I was in really good shape I would not have been able to get all that elk out without spoilage.While I enjoy hunting alone, I know that elk hunting is not one that I can responsibly do alone.Shootmoore
I am hoping to have a hunting parter if/when the time comes. But as they say hope for the best but plan for the worst. There is a friend of my mother's that offerred to hunt with me to show me the ropes, but he is a bow hunter and I am not. I have also posted on a few forums looking for a hunting partner/mentor but so far had no luck, so I am not holding my breath on having anyone with me when I hunt. I am also on an extremely tight budget so horses or expensive gadgets are not an option. If I can find an area that allows it my goal is cows rather than bulls, I am more interested in filling my freezer than getting a trophy that I could not afford to have mounted by a taxidermist anyways. Likely I would give the hide away to someone that could process it themselves.Someone on another forum mentioned that in some states it is illegal to bone out an elk where it is killed, and that I might be required to haul out the entire carcass. Anyone know if that is true of Washington?No not true at all in WA or anywhere else I believe. F&G anywhere can tell cuts of meat and what you have so in general hunt areas you can and should bone your meat out in the field. It keeps the meat better longer and cools it off faster. Some permit hunts have special restrictions such as some hunts in AK require you sawing off the bottom jaw and bringing it out with you to turn into F&G. In WA you have to keep proof of sex on Cows NATURALLY ATTACHED TO MEAT. Bulls the antlers suffuce for proof of sex.