Glenn Hockett
New member
It's about the hunt. Every elk is a trophy.
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I'll second what everyone else is saying here. But I'd like to also add that my personal feeling is that a public land cow elk hunt is a very under-rated hunting experience. I think most people believe harvesting a cow is all about shooting one out of a wheat field during the late season. There's nothing wrong with that obviously. But if you put boots on the ground and work to get away from the roads and get the drop on a wild cow on public land and have the opportunity to tag the creature then you've just had a tremendous hunting experience. They're still elk after all and killing one fair chase in wild country is quite a privilege.
Talking with a hunting buddy and told him I was going west to hunt cow elk and he said I was crazy to drive over 1300 miles to hunt a cow. He cannot understand that a animal does not have to have a big set of antlers to be a trophy to me.
what do you think of hunting antlerless animals ?
I had a couple of tough seasons a few years back. I lost a really nice muley buck the first year, and a really dandy bull elk the following year. Both appeared to be good shots, but for whatever reason, did not do the job. I have taken my share of animals with a bow, and with a rifle. In 25+ years of hunting, I had lost only one deer, a muley buck. After losing these two animals, two years in a row, I almost hung up my hunting hat.... I lost a lot of sleep, and beat myself up about it constantly.
I expressed how I was feeling to my best hunting buddy, who also happens to be my wife. She asked how I could give up something I loved to do more than anything else, and lived the entire rest of the year for. She said, "maybe what you really need to do is go back to basics, the whole reason why you love to hunt in the first place." I'm not sure why I, myself, had not thought about this, except I'd been blinded by the bone, and succumbed to the peer pressure to bring home only "the big one".
One of my other hunting partners is infatuated with big head gear as well, and we do a lot of back country hunts together. My wife had mentioned shooting a cow during one of these hunts, and he said, "there's no way I would shoot a cow way back here". She then came back with, "what's the difference between a bull and a cow except the antlers, and the cow generally tastes better?" That really hit home with me, what IS the difference, why is one "worthy of a long arduous pack out", and the other isn't? Just because they don't pack antlers, doesn't mean they aren't tough to hunt.....
So two years ago, with a general tag, and an additional cow/calf tag in my pocket, we headed out during archery season. The elk were active, and we were having several encounters daily. My wife had to return to work, leaving my other partner and I to hunt. The first afternoon, about 3 1/2 miles in, we were in the elk, we split up and went after them. I ended up arrowing a yearling cow at last shooting light. I got her quartered and hung in the dark, and took neck meat, backstraps, and tenderloins out with me that night. When I got back to camp, he knew I had gotten something, I told him I had gotten a cow, and it was ready to pack in the morning. He couldn't believe I shot a cow back there, and complained about it the whole rest of the day, although he did it with 1/2 an elk on his back.....
We took my cow back to town to hang in my cooler, then headed back up that night, to continue our hunt. My partner ended up shooting a raghorn 5 point the next morning, in almost the same place I got the cow. We got him quartered and bagged to pack, he was about the same size body wise as my cow. I took backstraps, and a front and rear quarter, and he took neck meat, tenderloins, and front and back quarter. He then looks at me and says, "what about the antlers, I can't leave them", I said, "if you want them, you pack them, guess maybe you should have shot a cow, then it wouldn't be a concern." He made a special trip back in the next day to get them, and complained about it the whole time.......
I ended up shooting another elk that year, a nice young calf, best eating I've had in a LONG time. Mostly what I got that year was a nice big piece of humble pie, best I've ever had.......
In the end, sometimes what we all need to do is go back to that time when we hunted because we loved to be there, not because we need the biggest rack, or set of horns to prove to ourselves that we are somehow "better" than those who harvest the "lesser" animals........
Jbo
I wouldn't know what to do WITH the antlers if I shot a big buck or bull! I hunt for meat. If I did shoot a buck, I'd probably give the antlers away or leave 'em lay. I sure as hell am not going to spend my hard-earned money on taxidermy so they can hang on my wall. The meat, on the other hand, I'm using every last scrap. Honestly (and I'm really really being honest here), if a massive 10-point mature buck and a 1 1/2-year old big, fat juicy doe were standing broadside, I'm shooting the doe EVERY time. I have zero use for antlers.
Emrah
I had a couple of tough seasons a few years back. I lost a really nice muley buck the first year, and a really dandy bull elk the following year. Both appeared to be good shots, but for whatever reason, did not do the job. I have taken my share of animals with a bow, and with a rifle. In 25+ years of hunting, I had lost only one deer, a muley buck. After losing these two animals, two years in a row, I almost hung up my hunting hat.... I lost a lot of sleep, and beat myself up about it constantly.
I expressed how I was feeling to my best hunting buddy, who also happens to be my wife. She asked how I could give up something I loved to do more than anything else, and lived the entire rest of the year for. She said, "maybe what you really need to do is go back to basics, the whole reason why you love to hunt in the first place." I'm not sure why I, myself, had not thought about this, except I'd been blinded by the bone, and succumbed to the peer pressure to bring home only "the big one".
One of my other hunting partners is infatuated with big head gear as well, and we do a lot of back country hunts together. My wife had mentioned shooting a cow during one of these hunts, and he said, "there's no way I would shoot a cow way back here". She then came back with, "what's the difference between a bull and a cow except the antlers, and the cow generally tastes better?" That really hit home with me, what IS the difference, why is one "worthy of a long arduous pack out", and the other isn't? Just because they don't pack antlers, doesn't mean they aren't tough to hunt.....
So two years ago, with a general tag, and an additional cow/calf tag in my pocket, we headed out during archery season. The elk were active, and we were having several encounters daily. My wife had to return to work, leaving my other partner and I to hunt. The first afternoon, about 3 1/2 miles in, we were in the elk, we split up and went after them. I ended up arrowing a yearling cow at last shooting light. I got her quartered and hung in the dark, and took neck meat, backstraps, and tenderloins out with me that night. When I got back to camp, he knew I had gotten something, I told him I had gotten a cow, and it was ready to pack in the morning. He couldn't believe I shot a cow back there, and complained about it the whole rest of the day, although he did it with 1/2 an elk on his back.....
We took my cow back to town to hang in my cooler, then headed back up that night, to continue our hunt. My partner ended up shooting a raghorn 5 point the next morning, in almost the same place I got the cow. We got him quartered and bagged to pack, he was about the same size body wise as my cow. I took backstraps, and a front and rear quarter, and he took neck meat, tenderloins, and front and back quarter. He then looks at me and says, "what about the antlers, I can't leave them", I said, "if you want them, you pack them, guess maybe you should have shot a cow, then it wouldn't be a concern." He made a special trip back in the next day to get them, and complained about it the whole time.......
I ended up shooting another elk that year, a nice young calf, best eating I've had in a LONG time. Mostly what I got that year was a nice big piece of humble pie, best I've ever had.......
In the end, sometimes what we all need to do is go back to that time when we hunted because we loved to be there, not because we need the biggest rack, or set of horns to prove to ourselves that we are somehow "better" than those who harvest the "lesser" animals........
Jbo
Every year around here I see elk killed and then "gifted" to someone else after the person who shot the bull cuts off the head and the tenderloins. this drives me up the wall. I will shoot a cow and pick up some sheds the next spring if I really want some horns but I don't see the point to killing a big bull to give all the meat away because you don't like elk, IF YOU DONT EAT IT DONT KILL IT.
arggggggh!!! Im not disagreeing with anyone on here either by the way I totally support everybodys opinion of what they harvest should be because as long as its legal its totally up to the hunter and I will never look down on anyone who legally harvests and uses their animals.