Sitka Gear Turkey Tool Belt

Elk droppings

Griggs

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 3, 2019
Messages
195
Location
AZ
So I have searched and cannot find a thread talking about this, likely for good reason, either my google-fu and search-bar-fu isn't that great, or it hasn't been discussed yet, or there's no need...

I am curious about the differences in male and female droppings. I have tracked a few, and have noticed differences. In males I tend to see more of a dimple, whereas I don't see that in females. Is that correct or is that just happenstance? When tracking down elk, this type I have equated with bulls, which I have either corroborated with tracks or sightings. So I don't know if that was by mere chance, or it was because they do have specific formations...

213 (71).JPG

This type seems to be cow, as that's what I seem to find after seeing these.

IMG_6789.JPG

Is that correct? Or has it just been by chance and I'm seeing a connection that isn't there?
 
Why worry about shit?
Better off looking for tracks around rubs or wallows

I suppose I’m just always trying to learn about the animals I hunt. Why bother learning algebra? Better off buying a calculator. I’m not out lookin for crap, but when I find it, after a second harvest meal, I like to know what left it.
 
You could start by learning the difference between deer shit and elk shit. It's all bull shit to me anyway. 🦎🐂
 
Now that you have that out of your system- if the goal is large bulls after the rut, you need to know at what elevation the cows are located. The bulls will be ~ 500 ft higher and 1-2 ridges over from the cows. The little bulls will hang with the cows.
Just another trick to get you to the big bulls.
 
Thanks. I usually track them down to watch them or photograph them in the off season. Fascinating animals.
 
I know what fresh scat looks like & what fresh is. I have found several silent elk by how fresh.
Steaming poop is a much better sign than a rub or wallow.
Cows are separate acorns & bulls more clumps,just like bucks.
I know my shit.

Clumps vs. pellets has more to do with diet for both elk and deer. Clumps are from grasses, forbs, clover, alfalfa, etc. I have seen whitetail doe/fawn poop clumped from eating in young growth clover/alfalfa fields.
 
Not many bound up cows in NM.....Yeah sometimes a cow will look like a spike pile.
Never seen a bull just drop pellets. Ever. Nor a buck.
Never mistaken a bull pile for cow pellets either.
 
Clumps vs. pellets has more to do with diet for both elk and deer. Clumps are from grasses, forbs, clover, alfalfa, etc. I have seen whitetail doe/fawn poop clumped from eating in young growth clover/alfalfa fields.

You nailed it, except it is more about the spring growth of grass and the first cut of alfalfa. Even my mustang clumps on first cut alfalfa.
Steaming poop? Ah yes, fire up the jetboil fo some Kopi Luwak!! :coffee:
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
113,678
Messages
2,029,464
Members
36,280
Latest member
jchollett
Back
Top