collapse

Advertisement


Author Topic: Elk hunting techniques  (Read 1558 times)

Offline TeacherMan

  • Business Sponsor
  • Trade Count: (+4)
  • Frontiersman
  • *****
  • Join Date: Jul 2008
  • Posts: 4476
  • Location: North Idaho
Elk hunting techniques
« on: October 15, 2023, 08:32:53 PM »
I think I’m starting to think elk are true timber ghosts. All the animals I’m seeing are in clearcut or reprod that you can only see into when you’re up above it, at eye level it’s as thick as blackberry bushes 😂

With this said it’s 30 min before light to and an hour after, then same in the evenings.

SO MY QUESTION, how do you hunt them the other 8-9 hours until the evening hunt kicks back in. Do you try and sneak into bedding areas jumping them in the timber and be quick on your shot? Or just go fishing 😂
If you shoot the first one you will never get that true trophy.

Online jrebel

  • Non-Hunting Topics
  • Trade Count: (+25)
  • Explorer
  • ******
  • Join Date: Feb 2008
  • Posts: 11527
  • Location: East Wenatchee
Re: Elk hunting techniques
« Reply #1 on: October 15, 2023, 09:26:16 PM »
We generally will not hunt them in their bedding areas.   We hunt them in the transition to food and water.  If you know where they are bedding (big timber ot thick cover) and you know where they like to feed (clearcuts), hunt them in between those areas.  Elk will almost always walk with their nose in the wind…..keep this in mind when setting up. 

Offline bkaech

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Scout
  • ****
  • Join Date: May 2018
  • Posts: 332
  • Location: Puyallup
  • Groups: BHA, RMEF, NRA
Re: Elk hunting techniques
« Reply #2 on: October 15, 2023, 10:18:46 PM »
This year more than in the past, we left elk alone in the timber because they were regularly coming into the clear cut in daylight hours. But other times I will often hunt the timber in areas that elk may bed, but here in Western WA the elk also feed in the timber and creek bottoms and are generally more active, they don't just "bed" there, they do all kinds of stuff there. Also, most West side elk, when you jump them they run over the ridge/out of sight maybe a few hundred yards. If you give them time to settle down then you can track them and sneak in again. This is totally different than elk in Idaho that I have hunted, those elk when jumped will run for 5 miles (at least is seems like 5 miles). All that to say, there are lots of ways to hunt elk and it depends on your terrain, weather, elk, and lots of factors of how you can do it. But I would try all sorts of things and see what works, then you learn for next time.

 


* Advertisement

* Recent Topics

Where can one find hides from hunters? by HillHound
[Today at 03:21:52 PM]


Shout out to bad-ss outdoor gear! by Sakko300wsm
[Today at 03:07:39 PM]


Fishing the East Cape in Baja? by EnglishSetter
[Today at 02:50:59 PM]


2025 blacktail rut thread by Kingofthemountain83
[Today at 02:49:35 PM]


One of my Wowzhers by Kingofthemountain83
[Today at 02:40:02 PM]


Seekins PH3 by jrebel
[Today at 01:50:15 PM]


Post rut Whitetail grunt call by kodiak06
[Today at 01:49:53 PM]


Blue Tongue and EHD outbreak in NE Washington by HillHound
[Today at 01:42:33 PM]


Smelt ? by Trapper John
[Today at 12:46:41 PM]


Real world feedback needed: Rangefinder Binos by teanawayslayer
[Today at 12:14:33 PM]


LINCOLN !! by cryder
[Today at 08:16:43 AM]


Thanksgiving duck hunt by ASHQUACK
[Today at 07:18:13 AM]


2025 15th Annual Hunting-Washington Christmas Gift Exchange by wadu1
[Today at 06:36:01 AM]


121 Quality November 20-24 by hunter399
[Today at 04:19:14 AM]


What are you cooking? by EnglishSetter
[Today at 12:36:52 AM]


Illinois, No Doubter by Birdguy
[Yesterday at 07:14:46 PM]


How to change email? by boneaddict
[Yesterday at 07:11:41 PM]


Late Alta Muzzy by Schmalzfam
[Yesterday at 05:10:16 PM]


Canning Wild Game by Whitpirate
[Yesterday at 04:24:26 PM]


Big old and heavy by Pathfinder101
[Yesterday at 02:32:30 PM]

SimplePortal 2.3.7 © 2008-2025, SimplePortal