Elk Hunting - Blowdowns

jmh00043

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Jul 3, 2020
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Newbie here,
Will elk bed down in pretty thick conifer blowdowns? There are still a good many trees standing and a lot on the ground.

Second question,
How long would you look into/hunt a specific drainage?
 

Hnthrdr

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Jan 29, 2022
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Co
1. Elk will bed down in deadfall, in some thick nasty stuff, it sucks to move through, sucks even more to pack stuff out of.

2. Depends, what season are you hunting? What kind of sign are you seeing?
 
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jmh00043

jmh00043

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Joined
Jul 3, 2020
Messages
60
1. Elk will bed down in deadfall, in some thick nasty stuff, it sucks to move through, sucks even more to pack stuff out of.

2. Depends, what season are you hunting? What kind of sign are you seeing?
mid october...
 

Hnthrdr

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Depends if the elk are still rutting or post rut… if they are still rutting a bit they will be easier to locate if we are assuming you are hunting bulls. If it is post rut those bulls will hole up in nasty drainages and only come out to feed or water. Depending on the country glassing should be your best bet, otherwise play thermals and learn how to still hunt quick
 

Rizzy

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Eagle, Idaho
I find them in deadfall a lot. They usually bed in the shade. I spend a morning and an evening glassing a drainage in October. If it’s an OTC unit the hunting pressure in October will effect the older bulls pretty quickly after opening day.
 

Marble

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So far as hunting a drainage, it depends on:

Size
Ability to glass
What I see when I do look
Weather
What I see in other drainages
Past experience in said location

Totality of circumstances dictates my next move.



Sent from my SM-G986U using Tapatalk
 
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jmh00043

jmh00043

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Messages
60
I find them in deadfall a lot. They usually bed in the shade. I spend a morning and an evening glassing a drainage in October. If it’s an OTC unit the hunting pressure in October will effect the older bulls pretty quickly after opening day.
Will you spend a morning and afternoon in the same drainage if you can cover the whole drainage with binos? Or move to a different drainage?
 

Wrench

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Aug 23, 2018
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My experience says they prefer semi open areas surrounded by blow downs. Find a finger ridge on the off prevailing side of the wind with thermal potential and you're getting close to perfect.
 

Gerbdog

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CO Springs
I find them bedded down in the worst deadfall you can imagine..... I call them deadfall bedding forts. They'll bed down on a high spot in the terrain, out on a finger, with deadfall on all sides except the uphill side and just sit there with their eyes and antlers above the deadfall... watching for jackaloons like me to stumble around the woods near their fortress and then boogie out if i wasnt paying attention and using my binos to find those tines sticking up
 

Gapmaster

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Dec 22, 2019
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MERICA!!
They love blowdown, predators can’t sneak up on them. I’ve seen full grown elk walk on top of log piles. Really unbelievable the first time you see it.
 

beignet

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May 14, 2019
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Montaña
The spot I know that's thickest with elk is in some of the nastiest combo of blowdown and dog-fur pine from a 10+ year old burn. Needless to say, it's a heck of a sanctuary as I can't get in there quietly enough to not alert them.
 

Deadfall

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Yes please...the worse it is the better I like it. My hunters not so much. After their first year with me. They accept thier fate. Haaaahaaaahaaaa....That's where giants live. Especially on public land.

It's slow methodical going. Lots of stopping and listening.

Hunting giants is a entirely different game then hunting any legal bull.

The more the torcher, the more the reward!
 

Rizzy

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Will you spend a morning and afternoon in the same drainage if you can cover the whole drainage with binos? Or move to a different drainage?
Yes, they can get pushed around by wolves and human pressure. In these OTC units I hunt, I’m typically only interested in the upper end of the drainage where the highest water source is. I glass it in the evening after hiking in and the following morning usually all from the same spot. Sometimes a herd will move in overnight.
 
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I find them bedded down in the worst deadfall you can imagine..... I call them deadfall bedding forts. They'll bed down on a high spot in the terrain, out on a finger, with deadfall on all sides except the uphill side and just sit there with their eyes and antlers above the deadfall... watching for jackaloons like me to stumble around the woods near their fortress and then boogie out if i wasnt paying attention and using my binos to find those tines sticking up
This 100%.
 
Joined
Dec 31, 2021
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I have seen them on the edge of the blowdown where they can run out of. In my world they prefer north side lodgepole thickets. You hunt looking for a color change when they stand up.
 
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