Levajo
Member
I have been doing research on different online forums and turning through the pages of the 2018 MT regs book while highlighting units on a map and looking at aerial footage on onX maps. I will be a student at MSU this fall looking to major in fish and wildlife management. I bought a kuiu tent and am wanting to hike into an area to set up camp. The areas i have picked out to do a 4 or 5 day hunt are units 455, 449, and 370. All of these places are under a 2 hour drive from Bozeman and I plan to scout them all come august and hopefully have an idea of where a few decent bulls might be come opener of archery. I picked these areas because they seemed to have somewhat harder access points and are smaller units that may be overlooked by a lot of the out of state guys coming in. Of all the places i research online it seems there's always people who have negative comments about each place i get my hopes up for. Such as wolves, grizzlies, hard to access, road hunters, motorized traffic, horses and bikers etc. From where i am from and how i was raised into hunting is to not believe anything from anyone until you scout it yourself. Looking at the public land in MT is very intimidating for that motto and i have come to realize most of the hunters out here are not full of lies to steer college newbies in the wrong direction.
I have killed over 35 white tails with my bow and would like to consider myself a somewhat seasoned bowhunter but after spending last season chasing cow elk in 311 with my bow and coming up empty handed i quickly learned elk are a whole new level of challenging with a bow.
In 455 ive read its "a waste of time without horses or a bike." in 449 I read its "too much effort for not enough elk sightings." and in 370 i have read different reviews saying "Too many road hunters or access is impossible."
In IL if you were to call 10 land owners and get access from 1 that would be considered a huge success. Last winter i contacted or attempted to contact close to 17 to 19 different ranches and landowners using the onxmaps and whitepages online to find out where ppl lived to knock on doors and called and left voicemails etc. I finally was successful but it took me til jan5 to harvest my first elk in 311.
That being said i am not afraid to work for my elk and right now im personally leaning on 370 of being the best of the 3. Anyone have a vote thats different? Or has anyone even stepped foot in all 3 units to be able to give an accurate opinion? Thanks for any input
I have killed over 35 white tails with my bow and would like to consider myself a somewhat seasoned bowhunter but after spending last season chasing cow elk in 311 with my bow and coming up empty handed i quickly learned elk are a whole new level of challenging with a bow.
In 455 ive read its "a waste of time without horses or a bike." in 449 I read its "too much effort for not enough elk sightings." and in 370 i have read different reviews saying "Too many road hunters or access is impossible."
In IL if you were to call 10 land owners and get access from 1 that would be considered a huge success. Last winter i contacted or attempted to contact close to 17 to 19 different ranches and landowners using the onxmaps and whitepages online to find out where ppl lived to knock on doors and called and left voicemails etc. I finally was successful but it took me til jan5 to harvest my first elk in 311.
That being said i am not afraid to work for my elk and right now im personally leaning on 370 of being the best of the 3. Anyone have a vote thats different? Or has anyone even stepped foot in all 3 units to be able to give an accurate opinion? Thanks for any input