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Joined: Mar 2010
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Campfire Ranger
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Originally Posted by AZmark
This is what a yearling elk bull or cow will look like for size. Pic taken on game cam in Sept 2018 in my driveway. This guy would have been born around June 1, 2017, so about 15 months old.


[Linked Image from i.postimg.cc]



This is what a elk calf would look like in September at about 3-4 months old. Pic taken also in Sept this year by gamecam at my watertrough.
t
[Linked Image from i.postimg.cc]



yep. usually see the first calves dropping starting third week of May and into June. 5 to 6 months old then. Seen many calves make it through winter especially the ones hanging around ag land. Around 90 lbs boned out meat on him/her maybe bit more based on ones friends have shot.

Nothing wrong with shooting any legal elk

GB1

Joined: Jun 2001
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las Offline
Campfire 'Bwana
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Last year I killed an orphaned calf caribou using my second either sex tag, having used my first one on a limping cow. i'd already passed on the cow earlier, but some yahoo up valley cut loose way beyond range and bullet-chipped her hoof, as it turned out. When she came back by me, limping, I took her. Guilt free on both. In fact, kinda feel good, even tho there was only a few lbs of meat on the female calf. Under similar circumstances (2 tags) I'd do it again. I doubt that the calf-meat went over 20#.

With 6 tags between son, wife, and myself, I felt I could afford it. We only got one more cow, and ran out of meat in the spring. Burned..... smile

This year was a single tag, either sex year, and we took a big bull, a medium, and a yearling, as first opportunities offered, passing only on the cows....

Next year, having hunted this herd/area now for 3 years, I'll feel safe to hold out for at least a medium bull, unless late in the hunt. What wife and son do is up to them.

The largest bodied yearling moose I've taken had 3 1/2 inch spikes, the smallest had 16 " spikes. Probably just genetics, but I dunno. I've also takrn one with 2" spikes. Boned out meat ranged from lightest to heaviest was about 40 lbs differential IIRC.

As noted above, calves are the least "invested" in the population.

Last edited by las; 12/03/21.

The only true cost of having a dog is its death.

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Campfire Kahuna
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As a comparison, here's a yearling cow that I shot a couple days ago compared to the OP photo. Note the length of the head.

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]
[Linked Image]


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