I know all elk are different but I was hoping to get some feedback from some of you who have had way more elk encounters then me and if you noticed any general themes with the encounters you've had.
In September my brother called in a great bull in a thick area. My brother moved off behind me and downhill a little and I tried to setup in a spot that gave me some shooting lanes and the bull was following the script perfectly, until he turned and started walking down a small game trail right towards me. At about 15 yards I just decided to draw back because he was about to see me anyway and he spooked. My takeaway from that was to draw back sooner because you never know what they will do and to be mindful if I'm setting up on a game trail because their is a good chance they will use it.
Fast Forward to a late season archery elk hunt my brother had a tag for. We found a nice crossing area and heavily used game trail. We were about to setup in there for lunch and I stopped and told him "Rule number 1, never setup on a game trail". We worked up the hill 20 yards and about 5 minutes later as he is getting his jacket on a group of cows and a bull sneak up on us and were walking straight towards us side hilling. He had taken his release off to put his jacket on so was fumbling a little to get his release on and by the time he did it was to late and they saw him reaching for his bow (they were at ~8 yards at that point). In this case if we would have setup on the game trail like he originally planned he probably would have had a great shot.
The lesson learned there was never take off your release. Now I'm torn, if given the option do you setup on a game trail or above/below?
Also, should the caller stay at relatively the same elevation as the shooter. I'm wondering if the bull in September was trying to maintain a dominant uphill position which is why he stopped walking diagonally downhill toward my brother and turned and took the game trail which happened to be there. If the trail wasn't there I'm wondering if he still would he have turned anyway to keep the high ground advantage.
Thanks in advance.
In September my brother called in a great bull in a thick area. My brother moved off behind me and downhill a little and I tried to setup in a spot that gave me some shooting lanes and the bull was following the script perfectly, until he turned and started walking down a small game trail right towards me. At about 15 yards I just decided to draw back because he was about to see me anyway and he spooked. My takeaway from that was to draw back sooner because you never know what they will do and to be mindful if I'm setting up on a game trail because their is a good chance they will use it.
Fast Forward to a late season archery elk hunt my brother had a tag for. We found a nice crossing area and heavily used game trail. We were about to setup in there for lunch and I stopped and told him "Rule number 1, never setup on a game trail". We worked up the hill 20 yards and about 5 minutes later as he is getting his jacket on a group of cows and a bull sneak up on us and were walking straight towards us side hilling. He had taken his release off to put his jacket on so was fumbling a little to get his release on and by the time he did it was to late and they saw him reaching for his bow (they were at ~8 yards at that point). In this case if we would have setup on the game trail like he originally planned he probably would have had a great shot.
The lesson learned there was never take off your release. Now I'm torn, if given the option do you setup on a game trail or above/below?
Also, should the caller stay at relatively the same elevation as the shooter. I'm wondering if the bull in September was trying to maintain a dominant uphill position which is why he stopped walking diagonally downhill toward my brother and turned and took the game trail which happened to be there. If the trail wasn't there I'm wondering if he still would he have turned anyway to keep the high ground advantage.
Thanks in advance.