Maybe this gets talked about more than I see but I personally don't think we're talking about this enough. I've heard from several old timers on the mountain over the years tell me how "there used to be 4 point bucks all over this unit and very few elk and now all we see is elk". I've witnessed, to a lesser extent, a similar phenomenon on my deer/elk hunts over the last 25 years and as a matter of fact, I've seen and taken more 6 point bulls than I have 4 point deer and most of those hunts were deer hunts with an elk tag in my pocket.
Let's just look at a small snapshot of Colorado alone, in 2019 the statewide deer and elk numbers were 418,310 and 292,760 respectively. Fast forward to 2023 and those same deer and elk numbers are 375,710 and 303,390 respectively. I can't find the archived herd date since they've updated the site but I'm confident this trend has been happening for much longer than the past 5 years. So, as deer continue to decline the elk are still climbing and this is even despite the historic winter that ravaged one the state's largest elk herds a couple years ago. The cynic in me tells me the states are aware of this but downplay its significance due to the cash cow of a growing elk herd and its larger price tag.
What do you guys think? I know there are several other factors at play here but the longer I observe this the more I think this is more of a smoking gun than others realize or care to admit. Don't get me wrong, I'm taking full advantage of these larger elk herds and striking while the iron is hot, but my true passion is to hunt mule deer, and I just feel like we're increasing our elk herds at the cost of our deer herds.
Let's just look at a small snapshot of Colorado alone, in 2019 the statewide deer and elk numbers were 418,310 and 292,760 respectively. Fast forward to 2023 and those same deer and elk numbers are 375,710 and 303,390 respectively. I can't find the archived herd date since they've updated the site but I'm confident this trend has been happening for much longer than the past 5 years. So, as deer continue to decline the elk are still climbing and this is even despite the historic winter that ravaged one the state's largest elk herds a couple years ago. The cynic in me tells me the states are aware of this but downplay its significance due to the cash cow of a growing elk herd and its larger price tag.
What do you guys think? I know there are several other factors at play here but the longer I observe this the more I think this is more of a smoking gun than others realize or care to admit. Don't get me wrong, I'm taking full advantage of these larger elk herds and striking while the iron is hot, but my true passion is to hunt mule deer, and I just feel like we're increasing our elk herds at the cost of our deer herds.