As REM says in song: "I haven't said enough; I've already said too much." Having been blessed to spend the past 25 years living year-round with elk, making a fair part of my meager living studying elk, and trad bowhunting elk very successfully, every time I offer honest, heartfelt advice, I get slammed by someone whose experience has been different. Best advice I can (safely) offer is to pay more attention to biologists than to outfitters and other hunters, and no attention whatsoever to anyone making videos and/or selling something. I will say: good bugling does not mean high hunter success. What it does mean is lots of fun ... assuming you have the ability to discern real bugling from really good fake bugling. While I can say that I've never killed a snot-slinging-hot bugling bull, I must also admit that I've missed several shots, over many years, at the biggest bulls I've ever encountered, who were in fact slinging snot and ripping their throats out. Ah, but these all were either in deep-deep wilderness where most outfitters even don't go, or on unhunted private land, and also way deep in ... the way it was for millions of years before we got over-civilized. Exeptions never make the rule, no matter how dramatic. When's the best time to hunt elk? Every minute a season is open! Do as I've done and marry a wife who understands, quit your job if they won't give you enough vacation in hunting season, stay out of debt. Everything has a price, including elk-bumbing. But hey, you can come to gorgeous,high cool green elk country any time during the season, and so long as you get away from the motorized mobs, you're gonna have fun. And adventure. Nothing truly good is ever guaranteed. dave