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Elk hunting essentials

Started by Covey, April 01, 2008, 08:24:00 PM

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Covey

Just wondered what was the most importent things u'all take with u for Colorado elk? Thanks Jason

Dave2old


bowfiend

That's pretty broad. Really want to know everything I consider important, or are you looking for the things I've forgotten and wished I had?
Is it September yet?!

Lin Rhea

Uncented Chapstick. You will thank me later. The climate can be soooooo dry.

Good shoes/boots
energy foods
easy to carry liquids
flashlights

Get in shape. Enough for now.   Lin
"We dont rent pigs." Augustus McCrae
ABS Master Bladesmith
TGMM Family of the Bow
Dwyer Dauntless longbow 50 @ 28
Ben Pearson recurve 50 @ 28
Tall Tines Recurve 47@28
McCullough Griffin longbow 43@28

Roger Moerke


rtherber

Camelbak,UnderArmour,gaiters,Jolly Ranchers(watermelon flavored),wind checkers,BIC lighters,trioxane bars,elk calls,quality raingear,sleeping bag,GPS,compass,topos

Whip

Tops on my list are good boots and socks, camelback hydration bag, and the most excercise you can squeeze out of your body during the months before leaving!  Get in shape!
PBS Regular Member
WTA Life Member
In the end, it is not the years in your life that count. It's the life in your years. Abraham Lincoln.

Basic Instinct

DON'T FORGET A BOW AND ARROWS!! Tags, Good sharpener, extra knives, quarter bags, Camera, so we can see your smile with the kill. Extra set of lungs when yours get tired. GOOD BOOTS,Well broke in.  The list would go on and on!!
Rejoice in the lord always, And again I say Rejoice.

Covey

Looks like I got work to do!!!tell me more. Thanks Jason

beyondmyken

binoculars.  You will/should do a lot of glassing to find the elk.  Positive attitude that you will get into elk so you will be willing to get up in the dark, hike uphill for an hour or so in the dark, stay out all day, and come back to camp in the dark.  GPS to find camp in the dark and find your elk when you go back for the quarters.  LED headlamp for long term night hiking and a small very bright flashlight when you need to see out a ways. Minimalist gear to spend a cold dark night if necessary because you got "cliffed out".

J. Adams

i reckon it depends on the season (fall vs. winter) and location of the elk hunt you will attempt (backcountry bivouac vs. alfalfa field ambush...) lots of variables...

regardless, the following always top my list - as I have found an immediate need for them while miles away from camp:

as much water as you can pack (or carry a filtration kit,) good boots (w/ extra socks,) good-quality binocs, a compact or folding saw, a compass w/ good maps...... of course, food, clothing, shelter and basic first aid aren't a bad idea to have with you either.
TGMM Family of the Bow

"The bravest are surely those who have the clearest vision of what is before them, glory and danger alike, and yet notwithstanding, go out to meet it." - Thucydides

SoNevada Archer

Jason,
As I read the list by the others, it looks like the most popular thing on most lists in good boots/shoes! I heartly agree. Getting in shape is also a must! A good knife, flashlight, water, and bivy, compass, good binoculars are all on my list as well. One other thing I don't see is the ability to judge crittle distance at the moment of truth...try and practice your shooting so you can make good hits out to 30 yards. The west is big country in most cases and I think 30 yard shots would be a normal distance to give you a good chance.
Also a good meat pack, I've helped pack meat for others as well as myself. A good meat pack is tops for that.
The doom of man...that he forgets!

Herdbull

Covey, You can take many of the things listed, but most important is self-reliance. It can't be bought.  Mike

highcountry

If it happens, a good sharp pack axe, pack saw and old back pack. Check the area when you first show up and locate someone with a mule or pack horse. For a small fee or trading out some meat they will pack out for you.  I always have a pack flyrod and water filter.

Rik

Mini hatchet. Spend a night huddling under a pine tree in a cold, pouring rain that's just one degree shy of turning to snow and you'll know why.

. . . oh yeah, if you didn't invest in a top-quality pack frame for the meat-------don't forget the llamas.

John Scifres

When you say essentials do you really mean it?  Here's what you need:

-shelter: clothing first, something to sleep in second, something to sleep under third (read the book "98.6 Degrees: The Art of Keeping Your Ass Alive" Cody Lundin).  Probably have to have something to carry this in like a backpack.

-water: You have to have a way to get it and a way to make it drinkable.

-Food - count on 3000 calories per day and don't forget something to cook it on if that is the plan.

-Bow and arrows

-knife

-some plan to carry or get the animal out if you kill one

-above all, get your body and mind ready.  Elk are not Indiana whitetails.  Don't plan to hunt them the same way.  You gotta move.  Be prepared physically to move.  The mountains aren't the hills of Martin or Orange County.
Take a kid hunting!

TGMM Family of the Bow

buckster

Asprin, meds and don't forget to drink lots of water to help prevent altitude sickness.
"Carpe Carp" ... Seize the fish.

Chad Sivertsen

Happy Trails,
Chad

northener

Intellectuals solve problem, geniuses prevent them

just_a_hunter

"Before you get down on yourself  because you don't have the things you want, think of all the things you DON'T want that you don't have."

You'll notice the "luckiest" elk hunters have worn out boots.


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