Mustangs Rule
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2021
- Messages
- 699
A close friend is an elk hunting guide. He is 40, only operates on private land. I am 74, decades ago I was a guide. We don’t hunt elk together. He is guiding then, but later during a long bird season, we hunt wild country for grouse.
Often there is snow. We see the tracks of game birds, lions, wolves, and some bear that have not yet hibernated. We talk about hunting, hunters, rifles and animals.
One of the first things we agree on, most hunters way overestimate how far they can shoot. Their benchmark is off a bench with a bipod, which hardly meets the needs of rough, steep terrain.
We both set range limits.
His usual max is 300 yards. If clients insist they can shoot farther, he will offer a field trial. A rare few can, so few can get into a classic siting position and properly use a Whelen sling.
Having clients be able to see big game is also a challenge, close in cover or far away.
We were hunting a long deep canyon on public land the last week of a cow elk season.
In a half hour's walk we saw, with just our naked eyes, four groups of elk way up on the canyon sides.
During that same time, four hunters came in on quads. Big riles, big scopes, camo, they all drove right past all those elk. One herd was only a ¼ mile in.
Often there is snow. We see the tracks of game birds, lions, wolves, and some bear that have not yet hibernated. We talk about hunting, hunters, rifles and animals.
One of the first things we agree on, most hunters way overestimate how far they can shoot. Their benchmark is off a bench with a bipod, which hardly meets the needs of rough, steep terrain.
We both set range limits.
His usual max is 300 yards. If clients insist they can shoot farther, he will offer a field trial. A rare few can, so few can get into a classic siting position and properly use a Whelen sling.
Having clients be able to see big game is also a challenge, close in cover or far away.
We were hunting a long deep canyon on public land the last week of a cow elk season.
In a half hour's walk we saw, with just our naked eyes, four groups of elk way up on the canyon sides.
During that same time, four hunters came in on quads. Big riles, big scopes, camo, they all drove right past all those elk. One herd was only a ¼ mile in.