Day Seven: Thursday
Today my plan is to hunt the areas above camp and see what tracks in the snow tell me. We have had a bull bugling late at night a couple times above and our original sighting of the bull was up there somewhere. In the end, I want to work hard and cover lots of ground to see if there is anything we are missing.
It doesn't take long to cut a couple elk tracks not more than 500 yards above camp. A cow and calf looks like. A few hundred feet further and I find where a bull crossed their tracks. The cow and calf split off uphill and the bull was sidehilling. We suspected that some of the satellite bulls around were cruising for lone cows. Our only herd was the one from last night and the 2 bulls definitely split off from there. Hopefully this guy was one of them and I could figure out what he was doing.
I trailed him for a long time.
In general I learned that elk are amazing. They have no concept of up or down or far and near. Obstacles for us are not for them. I tracked him right between several branches of a tree trunk when he very easily could have gone around. I guess he just wanted to keep going straight.
He seemed to be hitting every bench and meadow along the mountain. Generally, he was staying at the same elevation, somehere between 8500 and 9000 feet. He stopped at every meadow and apparently stood for a while.
Maybe that's when he bugled??? He never hooked up with anyone. I thought about going back up at darkish and trying to see if he followed the same route. But all the bugles we heard were late and I bet he was doing this after dark.
Today was an extremely informative day. Tracking snow sure makes patterns of movement easy to read. Lots of deer and smaller animals were around too. I crossed the cow and calf tracks on the other side of the mountain. It looked like they just went over the saddle near where we glassed the first day up in this area. As I got around the other side of the mountain, I found where Steve had seen a lot of sign after looking for his muley doe the first night we headed down this way. The little canyon is full of wallows and rubs. It is very marshy and a couple wallows were hit in the past couple days.
Probably by the bull I was tracking??? The only negative about this journey was a brutal downhill hike through blowdowns, steep mud banks, and marsh. I was wet, cold, tired, and my knee really hurt! It was a blast and I'm glad I put in the effort. It was right up there with a couple of really hard hunting days this week.
I know one thing, the way I have hunted elk in the past was not the way to do it. I kept thinking like a whitetail hunter. If you want to hunt elk, get all those thoughts out of your head right now. It's not the same. Not at all. Cover ground. Find fresh sign and hunt from there. Anything else is fruitless for the most part
I did have some neat encounters today. Along the route was this giant old spruce that had obviously burned a while back. Back home I love encountering old tress, usually oaks. I call them Sentinal or Heritage Oaks. My family once had a place in Brown County Indiana with the most amazing old oak tree on it. Almost every old homestead has/had one too. They are beautiful and I'd love to have one on a place I owned someday. This spruce reminded me of the same. Although burned, it still looked over it's little slice of heaven.
Several ground demon squirrels were encountered. Most barking loudly at me as I invaded their turf. The snow showed their peculiar travel patterns from one tree back the other and over and over. It seems they live in one and gather pine nuts from another. Their home range must be miniscule. Maybe that's why they are "protected". Their demon eyes are obvious in the photos.
http://residents.bowhunting.net/sticknstring/06elkhunt57.jpg Pics tonight.