Braveheart
Active member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2023
- Messages
- 81
I live in Missouri and mostly hunt whitetails and turkey exclusively. I am going on my first rifle elk hunt hunt in Montana. I have leased close to 1000 acres for 7 days. It contains a lot of water. several pastures, meadows, thick timber and scattered timber which is surrounded mostly by public hunting ground which is really a small mountain.
My strategy is to not blow the elk off the place by humping all over it and stinking it up. I have picked out a couple good glassing spots and I plan to hunt the first few days in mostly what I would call an ambush setup. I may try and cover some ground and still hunt after 3 days if I have not seen much. My hopes are the elk will be feeding in the meadows and pastures escaping the public ground hunting pressure.
Since, I mostly hunt deer from either hunting blinds or tree stands, most of camo is suited for hot weather all the way down to an arctic shield camo that I have hunted with in -10 degrees. I mostly hunt in scent lock suits, not just for the scent control (if you believe they work) but because they are well built hunting camo. However most of it is designed for sitting still. Not hiking miles or humping all over. I usually dont wear a coat until I reach my stand to avoid sweating. The most that I might travel maybe 3/4 of a mile. If I start humping all around, I know that I will surely start sweating as most of my clothing doesn't breath well.
I did purchase a pair of boots for this trip and some under armour base layers that were for high activity in cold weather. I would say most of my clothing is for low activity. I don't have any of this "Sitka gear" stuff. I also don't have puffy light layers for cold and a lot of movement. I know that somewhere they is a guy hunting elk in his farm chore carharts and everyday worn flannel.
Given my set of circumstances for my hunt, what light weight cold weather gear should an elk hunter have??? What is your go to setup (layering system) for humping around elk hunting on a cold day?? Also I wont be buying an Sitka gear $$$ due to the fact that I have dropped a lot already for this trip, new boots, back pack, bino harness and a crap ton of other stuff. What are some good options that aren't going to break the bank.
My strategy is to not blow the elk off the place by humping all over it and stinking it up. I have picked out a couple good glassing spots and I plan to hunt the first few days in mostly what I would call an ambush setup. I may try and cover some ground and still hunt after 3 days if I have not seen much. My hopes are the elk will be feeding in the meadows and pastures escaping the public ground hunting pressure.
Since, I mostly hunt deer from either hunting blinds or tree stands, most of camo is suited for hot weather all the way down to an arctic shield camo that I have hunted with in -10 degrees. I mostly hunt in scent lock suits, not just for the scent control (if you believe they work) but because they are well built hunting camo. However most of it is designed for sitting still. Not hiking miles or humping all over. I usually dont wear a coat until I reach my stand to avoid sweating. The most that I might travel maybe 3/4 of a mile. If I start humping all around, I know that I will surely start sweating as most of my clothing doesn't breath well.
I did purchase a pair of boots for this trip and some under armour base layers that were for high activity in cold weather. I would say most of my clothing is for low activity. I don't have any of this "Sitka gear" stuff. I also don't have puffy light layers for cold and a lot of movement. I know that somewhere they is a guy hunting elk in his farm chore carharts and everyday worn flannel.
Given my set of circumstances for my hunt, what light weight cold weather gear should an elk hunter have??? What is your go to setup (layering system) for humping around elk hunting on a cold day?? Also I wont be buying an Sitka gear $$$ due to the fact that I have dropped a lot already for this trip, new boots, back pack, bino harness and a crap ton of other stuff. What are some good options that aren't going to break the bank.
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