davinski
Well-known member
OK, my situation is a bit unique, but please hear me out. A longtime friend of mine, basically family, G, put his teenage son, G2, in for the VV first rifle youth hunt. G doesn't hunt, never has. G2 is interested and some mutual friends got him (and G) in on a cow hunt 2 years ago and G2 got his first elk. G2 has limited time to hunt and learn hunting due to split family, all of that. I've been telling G "you guys live in NM, swing for the fences!" so he did...and he did. Now those same 2 mutual friends and I are going to be taking G and G2 hunting. The catch is none of the 5 of us have hunted VV. I got a DIY bull in nearby unit 53 in Oct 2015, the other two guys have hunted all over NM, around VV, but never in it. So now we are learning and scouting. I'm the only nonresident in this merry band.
So in scouring the internets and GoHunt, I've learned, and please call me out where I'm wrong:
There will likely be lots of elk, but a nice bull is not a sure thing.
There's basically one road through the middle of the VV.
You travel by truck, foot, or hoof. ATV's or mountain bikes won't be much help.
Horses might be a very good idea.
If you're day hunting by truck and not camping in the VV, plan on not much sleep because we'll be driving and hiking a lot in the dark. The town of Cimarron looks like the closest place with a hotel, if we go that route.
I do have some questions without having set foot in there:
Does that main east-west road resemble the Autobahn during the rifle seasons? I know how crazy things get around western CO.
If camper-camping, it appears that Cimarron campground in the middle of VV would be the best place? Any weird seasonal closures on that? I found out the hard way in 2015 that some campsites between Questa and Red River looked dandy in August but were closed come October. I know a call to the USFS would answer that, but I'm kind of brainstorming questions here.
I learned 53 seemed much more suitable for archery elk hunts than rifle elk hunts. I had to look far and wide for good places to set up, glass, spot and stalk. Is the VV thick vegetation like most of 53?
Our group is working on a scouting trip or two this summer/September. Any advice you can offer would be immensely appreciated. I've been hunting CO elk since '95, am certainly still learning, but have probably filled my tags more often than not. But this country is new and I'm trying to stack the odds as best I can. I'm more of a logistics guy. I mean, I always figure if I can get in to where the elk typically are and don't waste time learning new trails, plan for murphy's law, and stay mobile enough to move to the next place if the elk don't show, eventually I hit paydirt. This business of splitting hairs over rifle cartridge, where to aim, brand of boot, etc. is all second fiddle to setting up a hunt to be in the right place early and often. In the Army we always said amateurs talk tactics, professionals talk logistics. That's kind of how I rifle hunt.
I'm looking at the semi-guided horse hunts that the local outfitter offers and thinking it might not be a bad way to go. I don't know how he'd feel about one youth hunter with a parade of gray-hairs tagging along with our collective "advice." I'm sure we'd have to set some ground rules. But as of now, we're all thinking of a DIY exercise. I could be persuaded either way.
I'm fully aware that this situation might draw some angst. My hat is in my hand here. I know there have to be countless experienced youth hunters out there who did not draw. I know that, and I know how it sucks when my kids don't draw their CO tags. But I also know how much fun it is to get someone on their first elk, especially a kid, so I'm going to do everything I can to get G2's tag punched.
I promise to follow up with a story and pictures!
Thanks in advance.
Dave
So in scouring the internets and GoHunt, I've learned, and please call me out where I'm wrong:
There will likely be lots of elk, but a nice bull is not a sure thing.
There's basically one road through the middle of the VV.
You travel by truck, foot, or hoof. ATV's or mountain bikes won't be much help.
Horses might be a very good idea.
If you're day hunting by truck and not camping in the VV, plan on not much sleep because we'll be driving and hiking a lot in the dark. The town of Cimarron looks like the closest place with a hotel, if we go that route.
I do have some questions without having set foot in there:
Does that main east-west road resemble the Autobahn during the rifle seasons? I know how crazy things get around western CO.
If camper-camping, it appears that Cimarron campground in the middle of VV would be the best place? Any weird seasonal closures on that? I found out the hard way in 2015 that some campsites between Questa and Red River looked dandy in August but were closed come October. I know a call to the USFS would answer that, but I'm kind of brainstorming questions here.
I learned 53 seemed much more suitable for archery elk hunts than rifle elk hunts. I had to look far and wide for good places to set up, glass, spot and stalk. Is the VV thick vegetation like most of 53?
Our group is working on a scouting trip or two this summer/September. Any advice you can offer would be immensely appreciated. I've been hunting CO elk since '95, am certainly still learning, but have probably filled my tags more often than not. But this country is new and I'm trying to stack the odds as best I can. I'm more of a logistics guy. I mean, I always figure if I can get in to where the elk typically are and don't waste time learning new trails, plan for murphy's law, and stay mobile enough to move to the next place if the elk don't show, eventually I hit paydirt. This business of splitting hairs over rifle cartridge, where to aim, brand of boot, etc. is all second fiddle to setting up a hunt to be in the right place early and often. In the Army we always said amateurs talk tactics, professionals talk logistics. That's kind of how I rifle hunt.
I'm looking at the semi-guided horse hunts that the local outfitter offers and thinking it might not be a bad way to go. I don't know how he'd feel about one youth hunter with a parade of gray-hairs tagging along with our collective "advice." I'm sure we'd have to set some ground rules. But as of now, we're all thinking of a DIY exercise. I could be persuaded either way.
I'm fully aware that this situation might draw some angst. My hat is in my hand here. I know there have to be countless experienced youth hunters out there who did not draw. I know that, and I know how it sucks when my kids don't draw their CO tags. But I also know how much fun it is to get someone on their first elk, especially a kid, so I'm going to do everything I can to get G2's tag punched.
I promise to follow up with a story and pictures!
Thanks in advance.
Dave