Two Person Calling Strategy
I was at a 3D shoot this last weekend and a conversation came up about my last year’s elk hunt and how we setup. The comment was made that the caller should have setup 100 yards behind me and the bull would have walked right into me.
I know a lot of hunters buy into the idea that the caller should be 75 yards behind the shooter. I disagree and I will do my best to explain why.
I always preach getting as close as possible depending on the terrain and cover which is usually in the 70-80 yards range (from experience, getting any closer usually ends up in a busted stalk). So let’s say I have made it to 80 yards and I am ready to start the calling sequence. My hunting partner now needs to be 75 yards behind me. This now puts the new cow or bull at somewhere around 150 to 160 yards. In my opinion you have just shot your whole setup in the foot. At those yardages you have not created a threat to that bull and you will most likely have a hard time pulling that bull away from his cows.
In the past 5 years as I have been calling in elk for others or when I call as the cameraman I can’t help but notice how I as the caller have had better shot opportunities than the shooter. This is even after the shooter typically moves 10 to 20 yards in the quartering upwind direction. Last year I called in 5 bulls (between Sept 10-13) and every single bull presented a shot to the caller.
So what about a satellite bull? I will have a tough time believing that any elk would like to wander any farther than necessary to find a lone cow (satellites typically cover a lot more ground in search for other elk). So why not get as close as possible before you start calling?
Let’s discuss another reason why I don’t prefer a caller setup that far behind the shooter. Let’s rewind back to 2003. I was setup on a clearcut edge and my uncle tucked himself away about 75 yards behind me in the swampy alder patch. My uncle begins calling and the bull can’t take it anymore and begins working into the call. It was one of those instances that once the bull committed he wasn’t going to stop. The bull walked by at about 35 yards as he was circling to get wind but he also was getting on a main trail to enter the swamp that I hadn’t seen. This bull walks past me without presenting a shot (alder chocked timber edge). It wasn’t long until the bull was between us, got my wind and exited stage left. On the way back to the truck I can’t count how many times I heard “I could have killed that bull 100 times if I had a bow”. If I choose my setup right that bull should slowly work into my shooting zone instead of moving through it quickly to find the caller.
The one scenario where these tactics won’t work as well is in wide open spaces. It may be necessary to move the caller away from the shooter when the elk has the visibility to see where these calling elk should be and there is nothing there but a hunter hiding in the brush, Most of the time you will end up with a hung up bull. In this situation it may be best to have the caller separate from your location and preferably somewhat hidden from the incoming elk.