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Quoted: I do 1-3 miles 4-5 times a week on a 5%-8% incline with a 63lbs ruck as part of my normal work out. View Quote You're better prepared than most. My first backpack elk hunt, we averaged 18 miles a day. Out of the tents by 0500. Back to the tents around 2200. Less weight than your training but damn, sure kicked my ass. |
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@fuddtrucker, I have the Selway B tag so we'll be in the same area. I'll be hunting with a disabled friend so my options are a bit limited.
I don't carry much water. I carry a pump filter and top off every chance I get. Don't carry much weight, never thirsty. There's a lot of water in that country. Skip the hatchet- gutless method is best. If you want to go there, I carry a small plumber's PVC saw. Very light and works fine on legs and sternum. I also use a Havoline knife with replaceable blades. Always have a sharp knife that way. |
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Quoted: @fuddtrucker, I have the Selway B tag so we'll be in the same area. I'll be hunting with a disabled friend so my options are a bit limited. I don't carry much water. I carry a pump filter and top off every chance I get. Don't carry much weight, never thirsty. There's a lot of water in that country. Skip the hatchet- gutless method is best. If you want to go there, I carry a small plumber's PVC saw. Very light and works fine on legs and sternum. I also use a Havoline knife with replaceable blades. Always have a sharp knife that way. View Quote Yeah, that's my plan. Best of luck to you and your friend. I am also using a pump filter as like you said, lots of water available. Just bought a pvc saw the other day. Ounces make pounds. Going with family that have lots of experience there and have hunted with my whole life. Can't wait! |
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Not elk but deer, once went on a hunt and forgot to take ammo. No body else in the group shot 308, got to spend the morning just watching, went into town during the afternoon and got some. Shot a deer that night. I was young and dumb at the time.
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Make up a small puffer bottle with orange carpenters chalk. You can use it for wind direction and marking a blood trail by splashing it over the blood spots and on nearby leaves, rocks and logs. And it’s cheap. You can’t even write a message on the ground if you need to.
Go to a thrift store and get 8 or 10 king size pillow cases. It takes 6 on average to handle a boned out bull elk. I always carry two with me as it allows me to fill them each with around twenty pounds of meat for the first trip out. I lash the tops together with cord and hang the 40 pound assembly over my neck or shoulder for the trip out. On the remainder of the trips I use a freighter pack. You never use plastic to meat bags. Doing this helps get at least some meat out of the woods and saves steps and lightens the load for the other trips. After getting one down it’s vital to cool it as quickly as possible. You have to get the skin off. I gut the animal and skin one side. I don’t carry a saw, I just skin the legs down below the knees and then disjoint the lower leg. I remove all meat from that side and load the two pillow cases I have with me and lay the rest of the meat from that side on some branches or logs to cool. Then I roll the animal over, skin that side and hall butt back to camp. The meat left on the body is off the ground and is supported on the skeleton. There is now no skin on anything. I’ll usually leave a clothing item with the meat, but I’m sure it wouldn’t deter a hungry predator. When I return with the freighter pack, I have game bags and a small tarp. Chemlite light sticks. When you’re trying to track an animal or shuttling meat in the dark, they come in very handy. You can hang them in the trees to mark a trail that you can trace. |
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Part 2
Neosporin. It works for chapped lips, small cuts and infections, and the chapped butt from eating too much chili and drinking beer. Always two flashlights and two knives. A dromidary bag for water. They will hold as much water as you want, or don’t want. And if you push the air out of it, they only take up that amount of area and they don’t slosh loudly when you walk like a water bottle does. A small Anker cell phone booster battery with a cord to charge your phone in an emergency. That’s the short list from 40 years of doing it. |
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I swear I forget my fucking pillow every time a go hunting.
Backpacking Elk I’m usually good because I use a stuff sack that has a soft liner and fill it with clothes. Just don’t forget your pillow. |
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That is a great hunt. Spiking camp is worth it. There will be elk all over. Good luck.
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I forgot my ammo once. Luckily I shoot 30.06 so you can find it in every mom and pop store around here.
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Not in NM specifically but a few states north of there: there are other big animals out there besides elk and some aren't friendly
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Quoted: I bet you’re getting excited as it comes closer View Quote I would have an erection with that tag. Go smoke one BURN! Attached File Attached File Attached File |
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The first time I went, the gentleman above this post recommended chapstick. I bought a 5 pack, and by day three the other guys in camp were ready to fellate me with their crusty lips, for one stick!
The only thing I “forgot” on my last trip, was to buy a bear tag. My buddy and I got our bulls 15 minutes into day one. On the third afternoon, we decided to sit in a blind and call coyotes. Wouldn’t you know it, a massive black bear showed up and nobody had a tag….. Worst $100 I never spent!!! |
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Quoted: The first time I went, the gentleman above this post recommended chapstick. I bought a 5 pack, and by day three the other guys in camp were ready to fellate me with their crusty lips, for one stick! The only thing I “forgot” on my last trip, was to buy a bear tag. My buddy and I got our bulls 15 minutes into day one. On the third afternoon, we decided to sit in a blind and call coyotes. Wouldn’t you know it, a massive black bear showed up and nobody had a tag….. Worst $100 I never spent!!! View Quote If you are coming here to hunt, buy a bear tag. I see one every year and a hundred bucks is not much more considering all it cost just to get here. If you get a deer or elk, sitting on the gut pile is almost a guarantee of filling a bear tag. I hope BURN is getting on the elk . Moving into our camp on 9-4. Damn it, I forgot to remind him to take crocs or some slippers for camp. Attached File Attached File Attached File Attached File |
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It’s Sunday morning. I hope op has a bull screaming in his face right now.
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I’m going Tomorrow! Dreaming of screaming!
Now then, take your weapons, your quiver and your bow, and go out to the field and hunt game for me. I hope Burn has a sore back by now from packing meat. |
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A guy I used to work with found he left his rifle bolt at home after he got dropped off for a fly in caribou hunt.
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The season ends the 14th so we may not hear from him for awhile, I hunted the same area he is at last year and had no cell service.
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I see spotting scope, but no tripod....I assume you arn't packing all this in on your back?
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Quoted: A small hatchet. Makes it easier to split the sternum so you can reach up in there. View Quote Battery operated sawzall works better, 12" wood/metal blade.... Attached File |
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motivation!
The last of the mohicans intro scene |
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Quoted: @BURN probably is with out cell service and hauling out meat! View Quote This is my first camp with cell service. So far without elk too, but we just got started. Attached File |
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Attached File Attached File Saw Records bucks (multiple) and doe 2 bears Pronghorn Badgers Turkeys Grouse A crap ton of other animals and no elk except one medium sized cow about 1.5 hours before legal hunting hours Was there 8 nights Hicked in sat on water every day The night before the season opened saw a few drones and a helicopter over the Cimeron campsite It was flying passes over the area. 2500 elk my ass Next time |
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Quoted: Please and Thank you! I have made my list and checked and checked. But I bet there is something I have forgotten. Let me learn from your mistakes. Once in a life time bow hunt in Valle Vidal View Quote Not elk but deer. Checked my rifle the night before. Dropped the 5 round mag before I did so and made sure chamber was clear. Placed rifle in soft carry case. Climbed into my blind. Took out my rifle from the case and……….. you guessed it no mag. Not even a loose round I could shoot. Had to unass my blind walk back couple miles to truck, drive back to cabin and grab my mag and bullets. 45 min later walked back into cabin and the family was like what did you forget now?! I told them I got a doe and needed some help as she dove under a pine tree and I couldnt get it out. Shouts of NO WAY, LIAR, he thinks he is a comedian! The whole family piled into 3 trucks to retrieve my deer. Lmao. It must have sounded like an army trouncing around the woods. |
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