seeth07
Well-known member
I don't think the point the video makes is about hunting the exact same spot every single year over and over. I think the point he was trying to make is that it isn't very efficient to keep bouncing around to different units looking for greener pastures. The knowledge and experience you gain hunting a particular unit - and even more specifically he points out about hunting particular areas of a unit - creates a greater advantage than switching to a different unit even though the "success rate" and "hunting" might be a little bit better in an adjacent unit.I think knowing one unit or area really well is a sure way to struggle long term, even the best honey hole changes, if all you know is how to hunt that spot then when it is no longer good you are screwed, if you want to get good at elk hunting, not hoping your good spot is still good, then go hunt different units/states every year, and hunt lousy units, nothing will make you appreciate a decently good area like hunting a few really tough areas... you will learn how to find elk in new terrain, how to break an area down and cover it efficiently, how to eliminate elk that aren't worth chasing even though you can glass them, and many other things that translate to better success every time, even in your well-known unit if the elk there change up their pattern for whatever reason...
So if you start OTC archery elk hunting in CO unit 421 one year, don't decided to go and hunt 42, 43, 521, etc. on the next trips. Stay in 421 and use what you learned about that unit to increase your probability of being successful. Since 421 is such a large unit with a lot of different elk terrain, the guy in the video would I'm sure also argue that if you are learning how to hunt the high elevation, dark timber elk in that unit, keep at it rather than trying to figure out and understand the transition elevation, thick oakbrush elk.