Tradewind
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2015
- Messages
- 5,219
come visitYou guys crack me up. “I enjoy the hike”.. yeah, me too for maybe the first half mile while my hips feel mostly normal.
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come visitYou guys crack me up. “I enjoy the hike”.. yeah, me too for maybe the first half mile while my hips feel mostly normal.
I think 22 would be even easier today to drop one on/near a road. I wouldn’t mind another 3rd season deer tag there...LOL love all the close shots. I got a story and it is really a true story of when I shot my very first elk. We were hunting Little Hills which is Colorado deer area 22. My family has always been almost exclusively deer hunters. I had been going with my dad since I was able to walk pretty much. When I reached my teens I was seeing these dark brown deer with huge massive antlers. At the time I didn't know what elk were. My dad thought I was telling fables of some type. When I turned 16 I bought not only my very first real deer license, but also an elk license which back then residents could get fairly easy over the counter. My dad chewed me out and told me I would never see an elk there and it was a waste of money.
I think 22 would be even easier today to drop one on/near a road. I wouldn’t mind another 3rd season deer tag there...
Assuming the weather isn’t a prohibitive factor, i.e. the meat is going to spoil and you are packing meat and not meat + camp.
Assuming a solo packout.
Boned out
5 hours 1 way would probably be my absolute max. You can get a cow elk boned out in in 2 trips. So 15 hours of packing. On a relatively mellow/flat trail/logging road 8-10 miles.
Bone in
3 hours from the truck, assuming it takes 3 trips to get the cow out.
I think 3-4 is a reasonable limit.
Not for elk. Caribou and moose in some Alaskan units.Are there any states where you have to take the bones?