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Elk Hunting Tips
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<blockquote data-quote="Dave" data-source="post: 45138" data-attributes="member: 498"><p>I have found that they tend to be creatures of habit. They usually enter and leave a field or clearcut through the same route. I try to find a place where I can sneak up on that route in the early morning before light and ambush them at daybreak. I seem to have better luck doing this in the morning when they are leaving their feeding area than in the evening when they are headed to it. The worse the weather the more it seems like they stay out in the open feeding. Our season is well after the rut so calling has never worked for me. Once the rut does start however, it should be easier. A group of elk is easier to sneak up on than a single. I think a single bull elk is the hardest critter there is to sneak up on in the timber. </p><p>Dave</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dave, post: 45138, member: 498"] I have found that they tend to be creatures of habit. They usually enter and leave a field or clearcut through the same route. I try to find a place where I can sneak up on that route in the early morning before light and ambush them at daybreak. I seem to have better luck doing this in the morning when they are leaving their feeding area than in the evening when they are headed to it. The worse the weather the more it seems like they stay out in the open feeding. Our season is well after the rut so calling has never worked for me. Once the rut does start however, it should be easier. A group of elk is easier to sneak up on than a single. I think a single bull elk is the hardest critter there is to sneak up on in the timber. Dave [/QUOTE]
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