Lark Bunting
New member
- Sep 14, 2016
- 710
I know elk are all different and their patterns can differ, but I know there is some \"pattern\" to their normal routine. For example, I would be one of the easiest people to pattern: Up at 5:45, In my truck heading to work by 6:40 (I will normally take one specific path but sometimes deviate if traffic isn\'t bad). I am at work from 7-3:30 and backtrack my route home. This is where my routine gets more difficult...some nights I\'m coaching lacrosse, some nights I bring my daughter to ballet, some nights I go to the liquor store...but at 8:00 I\'m usually home again and in bed around 10:00. This is the case unless it\'s a weekend or I\'m on vacation. Work, home, activity, home, rinse, repeat.
There are constants in my schedule.
If you were to put bullet points on patterning elk how would you go about it?
-Elk travel from water/feed to bed at ??? in the am
-Elk tend to travel uphill to bed
-Elk prefer north facing, shady, relatively flat beds
-Elk hang around their beds during the day
-Elk move from their beds around ??? and head down hill to feed and ...
This might be helpful for me and other newbies for when we\'re out in the woods, trying everything we can to find elk and freak out. (It happened to me last year. I was getting pissed that I had put so much effort in my research, did everything I could think of out in the field and could NOT find the elk) I quickly got over it because about two minutes later a deer jumped her bed and stood there at 22 yards broadside...I just happened to have a deer tag for the unit I was in.
There are constants in my schedule.
If you were to put bullet points on patterning elk how would you go about it?
-Elk travel from water/feed to bed at ??? in the am
-Elk tend to travel uphill to bed
-Elk prefer north facing, shady, relatively flat beds
-Elk hang around their beds during the day
-Elk move from their beds around ??? and head down hill to feed and ...
This might be helpful for me and other newbies for when we\'re out in the woods, trying everything we can to find elk and freak out. (It happened to me last year. I was getting pissed that I had put so much effort in my research, did everything I could think of out in the field and could NOT find the elk) I quickly got over it because about two minutes later a deer jumped her bed and stood there at 22 yards broadside...I just happened to have a deer tag for the unit I was in.