Irrelevant
Well-known member
It all started on December 1, 2022. I logged into the IDFG website to see about getting an elk tag to our go-to spot, only to be confronted with a random number of 30k and some change. I tried logging in on my work comp and got a number in the 65k range. I kept a browser open and by 5 pm they still hadn’t even gotten to 10k, and there didn’t appear to be any tags of any interest still available. I checked after dinner and surprisingly I was already 8 minutes into my time! I dove in and quickly ruled out any elk tags that remained, but FOMO caught be bad and I started looking at deer tags and which ones I could get both my daughter and I where we could hunt at the same time and she could shoot a doe. I narrowed it down to ID unit 39, BUY!
Now I’ll pause here and give a spoiler, I’m willing to share the unit # because I don’t think by the end of this anyone in their right mind is going to want this tag, not for the NR price.
Fast forward to spring and I started actually looking at this hunt in more depth and didn’t like anything I saw. They issue a metric ton of tags, which is the exact opposite of what I like about out-of-state hunting, and what I despise about WA hunting. I did talk to several people, including several very helpful HT-ers, that there are some really good deer in the unit and that the hunting can be pretty good if you hit the migration right.
I’d never really ventured into the unit much before so I planned a family vacation to scout it out a bit, and really just get a lay of the land. In the 4 days we were camped in the unit we didn’t hardly find any deer and the country was much bigger and steeper than I anticipated. This was going to be a hunt with my 12 yr old daughter, who, while being a complete badass, is still a 12 yr old. I got up and glassed but found little and really, the unit is so darn big that I felt like I should conserve gas while in there and just glass from close to camp (usually up a nearby ridge). The majority of the trip was glassing at first light, back for breakfast, then some hiking, back in the afternoon, find a swimming hole for the kids and drink a couple of beers, then back to camp for dinner and possibly some glassing from camp. Not exactly hardcore anything.
Once back I refined my e-scouting and read a couple of research papers published on the area. I never felt like I had a great plan, but we packed up last week as the first winter storm was rolling in, which caused a bit of an audible to a lower and warmer camp.
Now I’ll pause here and give a spoiler, I’m willing to share the unit # because I don’t think by the end of this anyone in their right mind is going to want this tag, not for the NR price.
Fast forward to spring and I started actually looking at this hunt in more depth and didn’t like anything I saw. They issue a metric ton of tags, which is the exact opposite of what I like about out-of-state hunting, and what I despise about WA hunting. I did talk to several people, including several very helpful HT-ers, that there are some really good deer in the unit and that the hunting can be pretty good if you hit the migration right.
I’d never really ventured into the unit much before so I planned a family vacation to scout it out a bit, and really just get a lay of the land. In the 4 days we were camped in the unit we didn’t hardly find any deer and the country was much bigger and steeper than I anticipated. This was going to be a hunt with my 12 yr old daughter, who, while being a complete badass, is still a 12 yr old. I got up and glassed but found little and really, the unit is so darn big that I felt like I should conserve gas while in there and just glass from close to camp (usually up a nearby ridge). The majority of the trip was glassing at first light, back for breakfast, then some hiking, back in the afternoon, find a swimming hole for the kids and drink a couple of beers, then back to camp for dinner and possibly some glassing from camp. Not exactly hardcore anything.
Once back I refined my e-scouting and read a couple of research papers published on the area. I never felt like I had a great plan, but we packed up last week as the first winter storm was rolling in, which caused a bit of an audible to a lower and warmer camp.