2rocky
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2010
- Messages
- 5,137
Once a moving herd of elk slows down, or is moving without being pushed (by other hunters, or after spooking) many times will be side by side and you can't see the cow or calf behind her
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It's one of my favorites here. Called turkey bean here. Homesteaders would collect & hang in turkey & chicken coops for the seed that falls out.Nice country. An aside, I noticed right away the pink flower on the bank is Rocky Mountain Bee Plant, Cleome serrulata. It's nectar rich flowers are used by pollinators like butterflies, bees, and hummingbirds. I go to considerable lengths to collect seed pods in late summer to grow it in my gardens, primarily to attract hummers. In late summer it's particularly useful to attract bees as it keeps them off the hummingbird feeders.
In most years our yard is filled with bee plant which attracts hummingbirds by the thousands. Fortunately, deer, elk and moose don't find it palatable. Other common names for it are stinkweed and stinking clover.
That data is largely available from the unit descriptions, harvest success rates, and public access summaries on the WG&F hunt unit webpages. The info there is written by the district field bio, or directly from their data and observations. For more fleshed-out info I would consult the WG&F hunt harvest report + the job completion report. Especially pay attention to NR success rates for the tag in question, since that is more relevant data. That should be all the info needed to select a unit to apply for.Thank you. I plan to call a biologist before pulling the trigger on a tag. I want to make sure that whatever zone I put her in for has a good chance of having elk there in huntable numbers on public land during the timeframe that we have to go in.