Bringitbig
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- Jul 26, 2006
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Here's a hypothetical situation for you elk hunters to ponder over and give your thoughts to me as well as other readers maybe wondering the same thing.
There's 5 minutes of legal shooting light left, you spot a bull (or cow if that's what your tag says) worth taking and you make the shot. Elk is down for good within minutes.
Now, you have the critical chore of getting the elk field dressed by yourself, which is no problem because you have the right tools and light. To put a wrench in the gears, you're 5 miles back, on foot. You could make it out tonight with one quarter. But, what do you do with the rest of the meat considering you won't be able to get back till tomorrow?
You should clearly understand that this scenario is very possible. This is the way I hunt elk every year, minus harvesting an elk every year I'm sorry to say. Keep in mind that I typically hunt in ID where the wolf population is way more than most hunters would prefer...please don't get started on the wolf topic...lol
I feel the options are as follows, not necessarilly in any order;
1. You pack your quarter out at night and hope for the best with the rest...keeping the meat cool is no problem as the temps are in the 20's at night and 50's during the day?
2. You stay the night with the elk to ward off predators, make the best out of it, then carry out a quarter the next morning and bring others with you that mid-morning to help get the remaining?
3. Combination of number 1 and then hang the quarters high above the ground with rope that's in your pack and then return mid-morning with help?
4. You leave the field dressed elk as a whole, haul tail back to camp and then work through the night with others to pack all the meat out before sunrise? Considering they're willing to do this of coarse, not likely in my camp, so please don't automatically select this one, leave it as a pipe dream.
5. You stay with the elk until it's all been eating by yourself? I'm just kidding about this one.
There you have it, so, let me, (readers), know what you think?
Robert
There's 5 minutes of legal shooting light left, you spot a bull (or cow if that's what your tag says) worth taking and you make the shot. Elk is down for good within minutes.
Now, you have the critical chore of getting the elk field dressed by yourself, which is no problem because you have the right tools and light. To put a wrench in the gears, you're 5 miles back, on foot. You could make it out tonight with one quarter. But, what do you do with the rest of the meat considering you won't be able to get back till tomorrow?
You should clearly understand that this scenario is very possible. This is the way I hunt elk every year, minus harvesting an elk every year I'm sorry to say. Keep in mind that I typically hunt in ID where the wolf population is way more than most hunters would prefer...please don't get started on the wolf topic...lol
I feel the options are as follows, not necessarilly in any order;
1. You pack your quarter out at night and hope for the best with the rest...keeping the meat cool is no problem as the temps are in the 20's at night and 50's during the day?
2. You stay the night with the elk to ward off predators, make the best out of it, then carry out a quarter the next morning and bring others with you that mid-morning to help get the remaining?
3. Combination of number 1 and then hang the quarters high above the ground with rope that's in your pack and then return mid-morning with help?
4. You leave the field dressed elk as a whole, haul tail back to camp and then work through the night with others to pack all the meat out before sunrise? Considering they're willing to do this of coarse, not likely in my camp, so please don't automatically select this one, leave it as a pipe dream.
5. You stay with the elk until it's all been eating by yourself? I'm just kidding about this one.
There you have it, so, let me, (readers), know what you think?
Robert