AzRaised08 Report post Posted Thursday at 09:14 PM The wife and I moved to Colorado a couple of years ago now, but we are back in Arizona—and for a pretty special reason. My buddy drew his first elk tag! It’s something we’ve both been looking forward to for a long time. We packed up the little ones and made the trip south over the past few days to help him out. We spent last night talking strategy and catching up with his family. As we celebrate Thanksgiving, its times like these that I am very thankful for. It’s nice to be “home”. This morning we were out early to finalize some scouting before the holiday cooking began. We checked out a few new spots, glassed some ridges, and got a feel for how the elk are moving. It was nice being back in a familiar unit, getting boots on the ground before opening day tomorrow. For those who have seen me post over the years, it’s been somewhat of a tradition for me to do a semi-live hunting thread whenever we’ve gotten drawn. I’m excited to do another and share our experiences as we get started on this year’s late hunt! Happy Thanksgiving to all, and I’ll be updating this thread daily. Thanks for following along! 10 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AzRaised08 Report post Posted Friday at 09:35 PM Opening morning started off about 4:15. Had to load up on the coffee before heading out into the woods. My one year old son is fighting off a cold and some pretty bad congestion so he was up a few times throughout the night. Between checking on him and thinking about the opening morning sunrise, sleep was a bit hard to come by. We left about 4:45 so we could hike and get into place about well before sunrise. We did the hike with our headlights on dim and got right into the spot we wanted. About 30 minutes before sunrise it was light enough to start glassing the ridges. We still had a rough time seeing well but we ended up seeing headlights making their way through the dark about 1000 yards away. Darn. Public land hunting. We just hoped they would stay a couple ridges over and thankfully it looked like they settled in a good distance from us. I glassed a ridge to the north about 900 yards away and spotted a big tan patch. It was still a little hard to make out but as soon as the patch moved I knew—bull elk. He was walking slowly so I made a note of where he was and figured I would find him once the ridge was a little more lit from sunrise. And usually where there is one there are more, so I started getting excited. I went back and told my buddy and brother I saw one. Unfortunately it wasn’t looking like the bachelor group we’ve often seen in this canyon was around. We glassed three ridges and no sign of elk on any of them. So I started looking for the lone bull on the far side of the canyon. One pass through the binos: nothing. A second pass, nothing. A third, also nothing. Same result for my buddy and brother. I was confused. I knew the bull was walking but I figured he was slowly grazing. My brother went up ahead and came back with some bad news. Another group of hunters was posted up opposite that ridge. They must have come in right at daylight and pushed them out. Double darn. Well with two other groups in there and being two hours after sunrise, we decided to head out and check out a new area just to kill some time before lunch. The newer area seemed nice but we did more driving than hiking since the road was bad getting in there so wasn’t a whole lot of hunting for us at that spot. Overall, a nice first morning and as always just happy to be out in God’s creation. We’ll see what the afternoon/evening hunt turns up! 8 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AzRaised08 Report post Posted yesterday at 03:02 AM Evening hunt update: We put some miles on the boots tonight—ended up doing about a 5-mile loop through a mix of thick pines and open pockets. Afternoon action started pretty early when we glassed a group of cows with a spike and a little raghorn hanging back. It was nice to get eyes on some elk, even if it wasn’t quite what we were looks for. We pushed deeper in and ended up bumping another group of cows. They caught our wind right as we crested a bench and slipped out before we could get a solid look at what was with them. The wind was terrible tonight, it was constantly swirling so we really couldn’t even work with it to get into any one specific area. Near the end of the loop we saw our last group of the night. Two cows traveling with roughly six spikes. We’ve got an unspoken opening-day rule: no punching a tag on a spike. So no tag filled yet, but the way the elk were moving tonight was good. And it was nice to lay some eyes on. If we can’t find anything over the next few days I know where we’ll be on our last day out. It’ll be another early morning tomorrow back after it. Elk are around—we’ve just got to get our eyes on the right one. I’ll keep you all updated! 7 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Schmitty Report post Posted yesterday at 03:40 AM Good luck! Thanks for taking us along for the ride! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Big Browns Report post Posted yesterday at 03:46 AM Good luck!!!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PRDATR Report post Posted yesterday at 03:07 PM Good Luck. I saw lots of people out yesterday on the 300 Road cutting Christmas Trees. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Flatlander Report post Posted 22 hours ago A lot of trees in the back of trucks on the beeline on our way home from our late hunt. Good luck, enjoy this beautiful weather! 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CatfishKev Report post Posted 20 hours ago Good luck out there man, I always enjoy your posts. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
trphyhntr Report post Posted 16 hours ago He must be bloody rn Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AzRaised08 Report post Posted 15 hours ago Day 2 Hunt Update Another before-5 a.m. wake-up call had us dragging a bit, but we pushed back into the same canyon we hunted opening morning. This time, no other hunters were in there—just us, yes! As the first light started creeping in, my buddy with the tag whispered that he had an elk spotted. Hard to tell in the grey light if it was a bull, but based on the size and the fact we haven’t seen many cows in there, I was pretty sure it was. A few seconds later, I spotted another elk the same time my brother whispered he had eyes on a second one. Things were getting good fast. About five minutes later the light got just good enough, and we could clearly tell they were both bulls and one of was definitely a shooter. They were feeding their way across the ridge to the south of us and heading up into a draw. We were really hoping they'd pop back out along the ridge directly in front of us instead of disappearing up the draw. Another few minutes passed and then a third elk stepped out on the far side of the draw. Bingo. Three bulls, all headed in a direction that would put them about 300 yards in front of us. The three of us quietly glassed them and then all agreed on which bull was the biggest. My buddy loaded his rifle. I gave him the yardage—255 yards. Perfect. The bull stepped out from behind a bush, standing perfectly broadside, and my buddy sent it. Looked like a hit, but the bull barely reacted. The bull walked maybe 20 yards and stopped broadside again. I told him to reload and hit him one more time to be sure. And then the worst happened. His gun jammed. Probably ran his bolt too softly in the excitement. As he tried to clear it, I scrambled to sort out his mag. Five seconds… ten seconds… felt like ten minutes. The bull was still somehow just standing there. Finally got the jam cleared, took aim, and sent another round. Again, not even a flinch. We were all thinking, what is going on? Then the bull suddenly tipped forward and started going down. Yes! He went down for good and we were all super excited! As we were high fiving and giving congratulations, five more bulls came out from nowhere. It’s always crazy how many elk can be right in front of you without ever being seen. My buddy asked if we should’ve waited and I told him absolutely not—250 yards, broadside, on a great bull? I would take that any day of the week, at least that’s my opinion. Then came the part every hunter loves: the pack out. Took two full trips to get him off the mountain. Long day, heavy loads, sore legs, but totally worth it. Could not be happier for my buddy—his first big-game animal with a darn nice bull. Thanks to everyone following along with this thread, and good luck to everyone still out hunting. After roughly 20 miles in the last three days, I’m honestly looking forward to “sleeping in” until the babies wake me up probably around 6:15 tomorrow haha. 17 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Flatlander Report post Posted 14 hours ago Good job. Congrats! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DUG Report post Posted 6 hours ago Heck yea! Congrats! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Big Browns Report post Posted 5 hours ago Great job!!!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tontotom Report post Posted 3 hours ago Congratulations on a great hunt and story Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CatfishKev Report post Posted 3 hours ago That's awesome man way to get it done! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites