Does chasing bugling bulls mean betting against the odds?
Having hunted elk pretty seriously since the late 1970's, some years I even pursued bulls in three or four states every year and occasionally traveled up to British Columbia, Canada, and gave it a go there too. I chased them with rifles and muzzle loaders a fair amount, but my real love is hunting rutting bulls during the September bow seasons. After a while, I got pretty good at it – enough so that I felt comfortable writing a couple of books on the topic. So maybe when I headed over to western New Mexico a couple of seasons back, I was a little too big for my own britches, because I got taken to school by both the elk and a trio of Arkansas residents who, when it came to bow hunting elk, were as inexperienced as a newborn baby.
West-central New Mexico is nothing like the steep, rugged, high-elevation mountains of Colorado, Idaho or Montana. Instead, it’s more rolling hill country dominated by pinon/juniper flora, lots of sagebrush and areas of tall conifers. A hunter can glass much of it, and once you find the elk, you can come up with a game plan that generally doesn’t involve physical effort of herculean proportions.
I met Jason Smith, William Dismang and Bobby Bowen in our camp. Wonderful fellows all, they were serious whitetail hunters who wanted a taste of elk hunting with their bows. We all had landowner tags for a beautiful ranch, but while the ranchers did give us a little advice on how to navigate the property and where the boundaries were, it was a do-it yourself hunt.
The evening before the season opened I went off on a little scouting foray and immediately found elk. Just like that, I glassed up a small herd with two really good bulls pushing the cows around. I gave it a quick assessment and came up with a plan. Meanwhile, the Arkansas boys had done some glassing of their own, and they also spotted some elk. Everyone went to bed with their spirits high.
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Black Bear On Sheep Mountain
Into a Dark Canyon
TELEGRAPH CREEK
The all-American pump gun (in this case, a 16-gauge Winchester Model 12) is one of the most versatile hunting arms ever made.
Boys & Muleys
Early Season Muzzleloader Fun
GOING PUBLIC
Bowhunterâs First Deer is a Dandy
Redemption at Windy Ridge
Stalking Sheep and Grizzly Bears
FIND YOUR BULL
Hunting Elk in Unfamiliar Territory
Cornhusker Mule Deer
Late Season Buck with a Muzzleloader
Archery Adventures
Dedication Leads to Wide Success
White Lake Blues
According to the map, there is an actual lake near the town of White Lake, South Dakota.
Too Many Elk
Second Opportunity Bull