Clawsar
Active member
With the new OnX map layers available, I'm able to start seeing more of the burns and timber sales than just what I can tell from Google Earth. Now I'm wondering how do you hunt these areas? Specifically elk, but deer as well, and preferably in September during Archery but also November during rifle?
I had heard to hunt timber sales as soon as you can after for the miss from the tree tops act as a late season food source, but does that mean a year old thinning area is no good? I was told. Urns are great as soon as the area gets enough moisture after the fire (that year if it's wet or the next). Are these true or is the window bigger?
Also, do people only glass these areas and either stalk to what you see or do this during rifle season? Or do you still hunt the fringes hoping to catch things coming or going (I'd assume morning and evening respectively). If anyone can let me know the tricks of the trade for these I'd appreciate it. I hiked in 5 miles this last weekend to some thinning areas to see they were actively being logged. I decided they probably would push animals out with that much activity, but I'm not sure.
Thanks
I had heard to hunt timber sales as soon as you can after for the miss from the tree tops act as a late season food source, but does that mean a year old thinning area is no good? I was told. Urns are great as soon as the area gets enough moisture after the fire (that year if it's wet or the next). Are these true or is the window bigger?
Also, do people only glass these areas and either stalk to what you see or do this during rifle season? Or do you still hunt the fringes hoping to catch things coming or going (I'd assume morning and evening respectively). If anyone can let me know the tricks of the trade for these I'd appreciate it. I hiked in 5 miles this last weekend to some thinning areas to see they were actively being logged. I decided they probably would push animals out with that much activity, but I'm not sure.
Thanks