OREGONCODY
Member
Things that worked:
E-Scouting- Spent countless hours on Onx finding what I thought might be productive elk spots- one ended up being where I shot my first elk.
Boots on the ground scouting- Onx narrowed everything down quite a bit, but it couldn't replace actually getting out there and looking for sign. I was able to spend 5 good days on the ground before the season opened. Only turned up one elk, but being my first elk hunt that helped my psyche a lot. I shot my elk less than a mile from where I saw the one I scouted.
Work- A four-on three-off work schedule really opens up the amount of scouting I can do, especially when you drew a unit 300 miles away.
Effort- This was the most effort I'd put in and was also my first successful hunt. You get out what you put in. Sometimes.
New people- Took a chance and went out with a guy based off a Facebook post on a BHA post. Turned out to be a great time even thought we weren't successful. Will probably do more hunts with him, and with others in general.
Binos on the tripod- Not much to say other than it kicks butt compared to holding them in my shaky hands. Much easier on the eyes as well.
Stone Glacier solo 3300- Great for 2-3 nights in the backountry and day trips. Carries loads like a champ; I honestly didn't feel a huge difference between my pack weight with an elk quarter and without it.
Things that didn't work:
Footwear- August is not the time to wear waterproof Danners with 1000g of insulatuion. It's never the time to wear trail runners when carrying a full kit over lava rocks. Will be looking into Kennetreks and Schnees.
Shooting Skills- Whiffed a very easy shot due to nerves. Need to spend more time on the range, and I am thinking I might build a packable steel gong target frame that can be rucked into the backcountry for long range field practice.
Fitness- I did a bit of training but could have done a lot more. I never want the deciding factor for going over the next ridge to be my fitness level again. That steel target frame is going to help with this as well; a "twofer", if you will.
Eggs in one basket- I spent a ton of time planning for my elk hunt, and nearly none for my other OTC resident tags. As a result I only filled that one tag. Won't do that again.
Range finder- Need to find a way to carry my Gunwerks range finder more easily. Having it on my hip belt is too low and not always on me, but its pretty big for my current bino harness.
E-Scouting- Spent countless hours on Onx finding what I thought might be productive elk spots- one ended up being where I shot my first elk.
Boots on the ground scouting- Onx narrowed everything down quite a bit, but it couldn't replace actually getting out there and looking for sign. I was able to spend 5 good days on the ground before the season opened. Only turned up one elk, but being my first elk hunt that helped my psyche a lot. I shot my elk less than a mile from where I saw the one I scouted.
Work- A four-on three-off work schedule really opens up the amount of scouting I can do, especially when you drew a unit 300 miles away.
Effort- This was the most effort I'd put in and was also my first successful hunt. You get out what you put in. Sometimes.
New people- Took a chance and went out with a guy based off a Facebook post on a BHA post. Turned out to be a great time even thought we weren't successful. Will probably do more hunts with him, and with others in general.
Binos on the tripod- Not much to say other than it kicks butt compared to holding them in my shaky hands. Much easier on the eyes as well.
Stone Glacier solo 3300- Great for 2-3 nights in the backountry and day trips. Carries loads like a champ; I honestly didn't feel a huge difference between my pack weight with an elk quarter and without it.
Things that didn't work:
Footwear- August is not the time to wear waterproof Danners with 1000g of insulatuion. It's never the time to wear trail runners when carrying a full kit over lava rocks. Will be looking into Kennetreks and Schnees.
Shooting Skills- Whiffed a very easy shot due to nerves. Need to spend more time on the range, and I am thinking I might build a packable steel gong target frame that can be rucked into the backcountry for long range field practice.
Fitness- I did a bit of training but could have done a lot more. I never want the deciding factor for going over the next ridge to be my fitness level again. That steel target frame is going to help with this as well; a "twofer", if you will.
Eggs in one basket- I spent a ton of time planning for my elk hunt, and nearly none for my other OTC resident tags. As a result I only filled that one tag. Won't do that again.
Range finder- Need to find a way to carry my Gunwerks range finder more easily. Having it on my hip belt is too low and not always on me, but its pretty big for my current bino harness.