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Joined: Aug 2006
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Gentlemen and Ladies,

My hunting group (5 of us) drew tags for first season in the limited GMU 67 in the Gunnison Area of Colorado.
I was wondering if there are any of you who know the area and have some input or advice for us. It would be much appreciated.

Also, I thought I would run my equipment past you all to see if there are any concerns that you can think of.

I am going to hunt with my Browning A-Bolt 7mm WSM with the Winchester 160gr Accubond CT with a Leupold VXII 3x9x50 scope.
As a group we are taking my Remington Model 700 7mm Mag with 160gr Nosler Partitions with a Leupold VXII 3x9x40 scope as our backup gun.

I appreciate you reading my thread and any feedback that you can give. Thank you.

GB1

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I can't give you any specific tips, but can offer some general suggestions.

Be prepared for any kind of weather. It could be sunny and 70 degrees or bitter cold and snowing like crazy. It could all happen on the same day too! If you're not used to high altitude, arrive a few days early and get acclimated. Drink lots of water and take it easy to start with.

Your guns/optics/ammo should work just fine. Good luck!

Todd in Gunnison

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What he said, otherwise if it is hot the elk will stay high or at least in the shade. It has been a wet summer so waterholes will be not so predictable. Remember Elk are grazing animals so they will eat grass, they only browse when they have to. Be patient and use your binoculars a lot. If the human traffic is high on the roads, you will have to hike in to the elk. Of course lucky is good too. Expect the nights to be in the 30's and the days up to the 70's, but as Todd points out, anything is possible. Buy a map and compass and play with it. Guns will be fine. Good luck and have fun. Drink lots but lay off the liquor until you kill and elk, you will feel really bad and need even more water.


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Get a topo map of the area. Look at the north-facing slopes, then look for drainages. Also look for the small "parks" (openings in the timber) where elk like to graze in the afternoon and early evenings. Get away from the roads and atv trails. drink lots of water and have fun!

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Thank you for all the advice. I have the topo map and have always had a compass....I think on equipment I am in pretty good shape.
I even printed off a few views of the area close to camp from the google earth viewer. they turned out pretty good.

I appreciate the advice. Take Care and best of luck this fall.

P.S. A good cigar back at camp is always in line when I shoot one.

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Thank you all for the advice. I really appreciate it.

I bought a topo map about 4 weeks ago and I have always had a compass. I feel like I should be in pretty good shape as far as equipment.

I will have to remember the tip about water....especially about it versus other beverages....I always have to have a good cigar back at camp after harvesting on though.


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If you are hunting public land, forget about watching meadows etc. Very few elk will come into them after opening day, or even then. I hunt north of Ginnison. The 1st season is a week later than usual this year. Gunnison typically does not get as many early snow storms as norhern CO, but they do come in.


If God wanted you to walk and carry things on your back, He would not have invented stirrups and pack saddles
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Thank you. I will keep that in mind. I am used to hunting heavy brush in WI, so I would prefer to stay in the thick stuff.


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Down in the south of the unit there are high rolling forests that lead up to the mountains around Stewart and San Luis Peak, with lots of good camping spots with road access. The area around the peaks is wilderness area, that you can access with a 2 or 3 mile hike for a spike camp or just day hunts.

Northwest of Old Agency is a small range of mountains that jut up to the north toward Gunnison. Check your maps and you can find 4wd access into this area.

Last year scouting for a deer hunt I saw elk in both these areas, up high (including at and above timberline) in late august and early september.

Check the gunnison weather the week before the season, to see if any big snow has dropped in the high country. Talk to the DOW folks in town also, they are south of the Safeway, and real helpfull.

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Thank you sir....you are a gentleman and a scholar.


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Quote
If you are hunting public land, forget about watching meadows etc. Very few elk will come into them after opening day, or even then.


I must see martians when I look out the window of my cabin in unit 67 and see elk feeding in the medows durring hunting season in the mornings and late afternoon... <img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" />

Don't know where you plan on hunting, but if you can't find an elk or 12 while glassing from a vantage point, I'd say you're either looking through the wrong end of your bino's or blind. There are plenty of elk in that unit, not behind every bush, but out of the last 4 years of owning a cabin in 67 and spending quite a few days up there, I can't think of a single time that I went up there and didn't see at least one elk per day. Most of the time it was close to a dozen. The 'famine' times are the summer and early fall. One day we saw about 80 out feeding in the middle of the day during 4th season...

Get away from the roads and kill yourselves some elk.

Good luck and I hope the weather is condusive to elk hunting. 1st season can be tough, after the rut, but before the winter 'migration' to lower ground. I would hunt as high as I could climb on the mountain, and like others said hit the north slopes. The elk will have thier winter coats on and if its hot out they won't want to move around much, and will avoid the sun like the plague.

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Quote.
"I must see martians when I look out the window of my cabin in unit 67 and see elk feeding in the medows durring hunting season in the mornings and late afternoon... "

Those must be on private land or public land that is either locked up by access to recieves very little pressure. Since you said "looking out your cabin window, I would suspect private land. I have elk and deer right out in my pasture also.

Most of the +80% of hunters that go home empty handed sit on meadows and don't hunt the nasty dark timber


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Well my comment seems to have opened up a can of worms. My intent was that elk will eat grass thru the day and must eat a lot of grass to support that bulk. It might not be in open parks and meadows though, especially if it is hot. Wear all of your cold weather gear and when you find a spot that feels comfortable in your winter woolies, then thats where the elk will be...


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Those must be on private land or public land that is either locked up by access to recieves very little pressure. Since you said "looking out your cabin window, I would suspect private land. I have elk and deer right out in my pasture also.


The only private land is all of about a section... all the rest is public land 99% of the elk we hunt are on the public and its accessible to anyone with the drive to hike more than a mile or two around our property. Christ from one point you only have to hike half a mile, but no one does because 90% of the hunters in CO can't seem to get off thier ATV's our out of the truck and fortunally there are no ATV's allowed in this area. From my cabin I can see about 180 degree's. Everything I can see is public land, AND is accessible to anyone. We regularly see elk our feeding where hunters had just been the day before.

Elk hunting ain't rocket science. The only thing elk are is predicable... Especially in CO where the elk abound. I think its kind of odd out of the last three years, we've killed oh, 10-11 elk and everyone of them was spotted out feeding in a park either the same day or the day before we killed them.

You are right, though don't be afraid to hunt the dark timber. I won't start staking the timber until after they've bedded for the day though.

Like I said get away from the road and spend some time glassing and you'll kill an elk. They don't vanish once the season starts, they still have to eat and drink, toss in a few people pushing timber and ridding their ATV's around etc, and they will move during the day too.

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All advice is much appreciate everyone.
Thank you.


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i hunt unit 68 every year during 3rd season. Haveing taken all of my elk on the fence line that seperates 68 from 67 in saguache park. If you go up to the salt house and hang a right, you are in 68 but if you drive down there you will see an old water bladder, keep going on that road vearing to the right, you can drive up into the trees and then walk on in to the fenceline. the fencline is pretty open about a jeeps width. cross the fence and you will be in unit 67. elev is around 9-10k and unit 67 is on the north slope. you can walk up and down the fenceline but its best to stay off the fencline about 25 yards, find an open spot and wait. They will come believe me. Tons of sign in there and its not hard to find. you will have them crossing from the n.e. going s.w in the evening and vice versa in the morning. Morning hunts are the most opportunity of course. get on you spot by 5:15 am and between light and 8 am are the best times for the fencline. We have hunted there for the last 20 yrs and have bagged every year along that fenceline.


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ps.
if you dont go to the salt house, about 3/10 of a mile before the salt house there is an old road, beware, very very steep to try to drive it, it's slanted road and very treacherous, but once over it, you can go back in there to what is called ducks foot, on a map, it looks like a ducks foot thus the name. that is unit 67 as well and lots of open and wooded aread in there and lots of elk as well. its a natural funnel and they will be in there as well. I wish you a very safe and successful hunt.


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Where would that be relative to where CR-17ff crosses the continental divide?

P.S. I sent you a message to your inbox as well.

Thank you much for the advice.


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hey no problem at all, i replied to your pm and left my phone number if you would like to call me. Let me know if i can be of any more help.


Live to Hunt; Hunt to Live. Enjoy the gifts God gave you take your kids Hunting and Fishing.
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How did you guys do. Any elk?


Live to Hunt; Hunt to Live. Enjoy the gifts God gave you take your kids Hunting and Fishing.
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