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Drew the only non-resident muzzleloader elk tag for 2016 in unit 201. Hunted in there last year when my dad drew his tag and seen quite a few good bull everyday. He tagged out with a 357" 6x6
congrats. that a good hunt
I had my tag in 2009,only rifle.PM if you need any additional info.
Originally Posted by Millerjj
Drew the only non-resident muzzleloader elk tag for 2016 in unit 201. Hunted in there last year when my dad drew his tag and seen quite a few good bull everyday. He tagged out with a 357" 6x6
Millerjj:

Congratulations!!!

How many points did you have?

Hope you have a great hunt.

KC

25 points
Wow, you won the lottery!
Originally Posted by Millerjj
25 points


Wow.

Good luck with your hunt, that's a good one.

Keep us posted.
Here is a pic of my dads bull from 201 last year.

Attached picture IMG_0015 - Copy.PNG
Hey Millerjj, I drew the "lottery" tag for 201 muzzleloader. I spent last Sunday and Monday scouting......can't wait for September!
Did you see anything good?
Was you in the Diamond Peak or Middle Mountain area?
It was the first time I had explored the area. Camped on the east side of Diamond Peak and looked at all sides of the peak via the ATV trails.

Had a herd of 70 or so cows, young spikes and calves on the ridge above us for two days. One raghorn bull with them.

We also ran the Cold Spring Montain Ridge. Saw one 6x6 and one 4x5 both in velvet on that side.

Didn't get to Middle Mountain, except to glass it from the area of the campground in between Diamond and Middle.
don't discount the lower country in the cedars, especially if there is water in Little Joe.
Last few years that I was keeping a watch after my tag, a lot of elk were hanging in the head waters of Beaver Creek, West of Middle Mountain. Had a 1/2 dozen bulls on the north side of Diamond Peak.

Some elk were seen on top where the 4wd goes west and up from Irish Canyon,.

There was no water in Little Joe that year and I only called up 1 raghorn from west of there.

I finally killed an elk NW of Cold Springs tank on the block of BLM land
Cedarvista or anyone else who's been on diamond peak,
Can you drive the ATV trails with a truck or are they truly ATV trails?
My buddy has a cow tag and was wondering whether or not to take a four wheeler?

Thanks
I'd say about 1/2 and 1/2. The ones that are accessible for ATV only, you might not want to use them there as they are in prime elk country. The ATV would be good to get down into Little Joe basin.

One thing for sure about that country is to make sure you have darn good tires with a lot of tread. That sharp rock country can tear a tire up pretty quick
Thanks for the input, much appreciated.
and good skid plates are a must, on most of those goat trail roads...
Hi Guys,
New to the forum here. As DuckDog said I got a muzzy cow for 201 this year. Unlike most guys in 201 I'm not going for a trophy; just hoping to get my first elk this fall!

Unfortunately I'm not going to get a chance to scout it. I was planning to focus on Diamond and/or middle mountain for a cow. I'm debating if I should haul an ATV all the way out there. I'm planning to camp at Rocky Res campground between Diamond and Middle. Any access issues getting to it?

Any areas in particular to focus on for cows?

Any info you can pass along would be much appreciated and feel free to PM me as well.

Can't wait to get out there in a few weeks!
Thanks!
Try looking in the head waters of Beaver creek. That would be west of Antone Gap. Go down to the valley floor between Diamond Peak and Cold Springs Mtn. Then head west past Middle Mountain. There seems to be a reason the cows hang out there. There is a two track that cuts off from the main road that gets you up fairly high,but it is still a climb from there.

There is a lot nicer place to camp than that campground,It is on the road that passes thru Antone Gap.There is small dirt tank there and a nice green grassy area surrounded by aspens.It has been used in the past as a camp ground.

The back side of Diamond Peak might offer the best opportunity before a muzzy tag as it is a lot thicker than he wide open spaces.

Also look at the Wiggins block on the extreme west end of the unit.Right on the Utah line.It has some good cover.I might be off a little bit on that name.

Another area is where the 4wd road comes west up over to the east end of Cold Springs Mountain. It takes off in Irish Canyon. Cows seem to hang out there, right after you top off.

Just my personal opinion but each of these areas are a far piece part and most of those roads are pretty dusty when it is dry. I doubt if you would want to ride an ATV that far..Of course the flip side is if you get much moisture, that turns that dust into slick mud which is about the only issue.

The road up to the top of Cold Springs gets washed out pretty good in the first mile or so where it cuts off the main road.I could not pull my horse trailer up it

I have heard that the store that sells gas down in Browns Park has closed or stop selling gas, so you might want to bring extra in gas cans.Closest gas would be about 60 miles away then I think.

Figure out how to ice down the meat,it's toasty up there that early. My hunt was Oct 1 and it was 80 degrees.

You can get on the BLM web site and get GPS coordinates for all the corners of BLM land. I believe it was the Little Snake field office. They sure came in handy as all that land is checker boarded with private land. It's must to know that as an outfitter works that private land, and he isn't to friendly about others drifting on to the private land.

If you want some photos, pm me with your email address and I can forward some
Thanks for the info.
Leaving Friday for 201. I'll keep you posted.
Good luck and let us know how it goes
Thanks Millerjj!

Have you been up there in the past several weeks scouting? How about you Cedarvista?
I'll be up there 9/9-9/12.
I was up there Memorial Day 2016 and I'm going this labor Day to shoot Prairie Dogs off of Moffett County road 72 and 63 just to East of Middle Mountain and Diamond Peak. This is on the flats East so no bother to the Elk and Deer herds. Lots of White Tails and Gunnison PD's there.
Just picked up a Buck tag for 201 as well. Any info on deer in 201 would be appreciated! Thanks again for all the help and suggestions guys!
Was able to harvest my first elk (cow) this past Saturday! Thanks everyone for the advice! Here is a pic and summary...

9/10/2016 201 Cow Elk hunt recap

Left Denver around 9am and got to 201 about 2:30pm. Original plan was to take 72 west to the road/path that goes straight north to Antone Gap and Rocky Reservoir. However, since we were there a bit early we decided to take the path that goes straight up the east face of Diamond Peak. We decided to go this route so that we could traverse the north side via the road and do a bit of scouting on the way to the campground. Taking this eastern "road" (cattle path) turned out to be difficult but rewarding. The first mile to the cattle fence was fairly easy, but after that a high clearance vehicle is needed. We were in a Chevy Trailblazer and had to move a lot of rocks and build rock ramps. Ended up taking us about 2hrs to get up this road (not worth it). It was rewarding because we saw 3 groups of elk (each 1 bull and 4 cows) in the ravine that we drove up. This was exciting and raised expectations for the weekend! After reaching the top (road that traverses around diamond peak) we bumped into CedarVista and his buddy that were doing some glassing. After a quick chat and realizing the sun was getting low CedarVista recommended going around the south side of Diamond to get to Rocky Res. However, I miss understood and didn't take the turn back down to 72 and instead continued on the path around the south side. Unfortunately after about 30 min it dead ended. We turned around and headed back and on the way saw a herd of 9 cows about 600 yds. up the hill; another good sign! After seeing so many elk on the east side of the mountain we decided to try and find a camp spot there instead of Rocky Res. We finally found a decent spot off the road on the north east side. We quickly set up tents and headed out for some glassing in the last hour of daylight. We ended up finding 2 groups of elk to watch and Buck with a couple does. Elk was our priority even though I had a buck tag as well. 1 group of elk were out in the wide open and it was hard to tell where they would head to for the night. The 2nd group of elk were feeding in out of some trees on the south side of a ravine that ran east/west. The plan was to find them first thing Saturday morning.
Saturday morning we rolled out of camp at 5:30am in the dark and wanted to cross the large open area between camp and the lip of the ravine where we'd last seen the elk Friday night before it got light out. Right around 6:30 we belly crawled up to the lip of the ravine with hopes of seeing the herd of elk. They weren't there, but we were hearing some quiet bugling coming from near the bottom. We spent the next hour creeping down the south side of the ravine toward where we kept hearing the bugling. About a hundred yds. from the bottom we still hadn't seen anything and the bugling had stopped. After about 5min of sitting there contemplating our next move we heard a bugle and cow call off to our left (west) a few hundred yards away. Shoot, they had gave us the slip! The next thing we heard was a large crash through the woods, the bottom of the ravine and up the other side, and few more bugles mixed with cow calls. GREAT, we thought there they go. We sat there at the bottom of the ravine a few more minutes and finally caught a glimpse of the bull with 4 cows at the top of the ravine on the north side. The chase was on!
I moved up the north side of the ravine to gain some ground on them as they fed up and over the lip of the ravine. My buddy stayed on the south face of the ravine to help guide me since I could no longer see the herd. He put me right under them. As I crested the edge of the ravine there were 4 cows and a bull standing across a clearing on small hill. I took a minute to range a large cow standing broadside at the top of the hill, but she was at 170yd; too far for me with a muzzle loader. There were still 1 mature cow and 3 young ones to the left at the base of the hill across the clearing. I ranged her at 140yds. I needed to gain 30-40yds on her to get a good shot, but there was NO cover other than small shrubs. I began to belly crawl and made it about 15yds before she spotted me. She stared me down for a bit and then began to move up the hill with the bull and other cows, but they did not bug out in a hurry. So, I laid there a couple minutes until they were all up and over the small hill.
As soon as they were out of sight I ran to the hill and made my way up it to the edge. Luckily there was a large bush I could kneel behind. As I peeked out above the bush I could see it was going to be a repeat of the last scenario... 100+ yds. across an open space to the herd. I was trying to decide my next move when one of the large cows spotted me and started walking head on straight at me. After a few yards she started barking/grunting at me. Then a cow on the other side of the ravine started barking back! Unbeknownst to me at the time a cow had walked up on my buddy at 20yds. So, we don't know if they were both barking at us individually or if they were calling back and forth to each other. Either way it was CRAZY! This went on for about 2min all with her walking straight at me. I was still kneeling down behind a large bush and all I could see was the tops of her ears. I was sure she was going to see me or wind me and bug out at a dead run. Then she stopped for a second and turned broadside as if she was going to walk away. This was my chance! I stood up from behind the bush and made a clean double lung shot at 40yds. She ran about 150yds before falling over. Everything was over with by 8:05am. I couldn't have planned a more perfect hunt!
Couple observations… We never made it to the north or west side of Diamond to check out the terrain or amount of elk, but everyone we talked to seemed to say there were elk all over the mountain. In total we saw 8 herds of elk. All but 1 group were below the road in elevation and had 1 bull with 4-20 cows. The bulls we saw (7) were all good bulls, but were not what I’d classify as trophy bulls (350+) or they were too far away to get a decent approximation of size. There were a good number of bugles at dusk and dawn and even 1 bull making a lot of noise until about 11am. I think it was the beginning of the rut, but probably not in full swing yet. My guess is that in the next week or so the big bulls will move in and break up the larger herds of 20+ cows with only 1 bull. As far as terrain I’d suggest an ATV. We were in a trailblazer and it took a bit of a beating; especially on the road going up the east face. An ATV would make it easier to get from point A to B around the mountain or even over to Middle Mountain. All in all 201 is a great unit and I can’t wait till the day comes I can hunt it for a bull…. Although with point creep who knows if that will ever actually happen. For now I am thankful to have gotten my first elk!
Congratulations!
congrats! cool that you got it done!
Congrats Rob on your first elk. I seen where you was camped
when we came thru there Friday. I shot a great bull just north of where you was camped Sat morning about 10.
Congrats Millerjj, that's a once in a lifetime hunt! Yeah I heard your shot while we were quartering her out. Later when we were done packing out we saw a picture someone (George I think) had of him. Looked like a great bull!
Here is a pic of my bull this year.

Attached picture 2016elkcompress.jpg
Rob:

When is your deer hunt for? If its rifle season
i can help you out with that.

Jay
Nice bull! What do you think he will score?

My buck tag was for muzzle loader. I had hoped to go back up this past weekend, but it just didn't work out with family plans. Thanks for the offer though!
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