Just curious how a person not only shoots the "lead cow" out of a herd of several hundred elk in the dead of winter, but how the hell you distinguish which one is the "lead cow"? I think in large herds the lead cow theory is more akin to a fairy tale.
Plus, IMO, even if you could shoot the "lead cow" it would be dumb to do so for a lot of reasons...
I think this myth has perpetuated itself from people selecting a cow with a calf, killing the cow then killing the calf that is reluctant to leave the cow your buddy just whacked.
I look large herds of elk over for a while and try to pick a cow that doesn't have a calf before I shoot one. If you look them over for a while, its not that hard to do...high cow/calf ratio's in a herd are 30/100 meaning lots of cows in a large herd don't have a calf.
Where I hunt and the same goes for where I started my elk hunting......elk are seldom in large herds. If we see a group of 50 or so......we think of it as a very unusual anomaly! Which is the reason we chose to hunt these locations. Where the elk tend to gather in very large herds.....it’s often “feast or famine”! I much prefer to hunt an area where a few elk can be found in most any drainage. But, that’s just me! memtb