AZ Antlerless Elk Hunt 2012

Status
Not open for further replies.

wankerjake

Member
Joined
Apr 6, 2008
Messages
2,509
Location
Flagstaff AZ
I suppose a write-up is due, I was able to accompany family and friends on their antlerless elk hunts this year in northern Arizona. We ended up with a total of 8 tags in camp, which is the largest elk camp we've ever had. I was not drawn this year but was able to get the time off to help find/skin elk for family and friends. My camera died fairly early into the hunt which was a bonehead move on my part not to charge it, so a lot of these pics are cell phone pics. Anyway, better than nothing I guess.

Here's a partial view of camp, we had a another tent and a camper set up but we were in thick enough junipers that I couldn't get a whole view. Wasn't snow on the ground like last year, but that wood stove in the wall tent sure feels good in the mornings:

IMG_20121210_085545.jpg

The first morning I was hunting with my little brother. Here's what we spent a long time looking at:
P1000865.jpg

We didn't see a single elk all morning but about 3:30pm we heard a shot that we figured was our old man. Sure enough, he got on the radio and said those oh so awesome words; "cow down." We headed for his whereabouts (I love GPS radios) and he had it gutted as we walked up. I helped him go get the truck while my little brother kept hunting.

My dad was still hunting the thick bedding areas and came up on a cow and calf grazing. Shot was broadside at about 50-60 yards, clipped the aorta above the heart. It dropped about 1/2 mile from a road but we were able to get the truck right to it. It's SOOO nice to be able to drive to them:
P1000854-1.jpg

Skinning her back at camp:

P1000857.jpg

We had her skinned, quartered, cleaned and hanging just after dark when my brother rolled up in his truck and said "You boys ain't done yet, I have a cow down too!" Him and I took a quad and my cousin and his buddy followed us in a Polaris Ranger and we followed the GPS right to his downed elk. He had seen them a few ridges over and miscalculated his sneak. Popped onto a ridge and jumped the elk he thought were still a ridge away. They ran across a ravine but he shot this one at about 200 yards. By the time he got on the tracks and found her dead it was about dark so he just headed for camp to fetch the cavalry. Here's how we found it:

P1000860.jpg

I would like to take a minute to tell y'all about how awesome the Polaris Ranger is. That thing will go a lot of places and a gutted cow elk fits PERFECTLY into the bed. We used the Ranger on my elk last year and I recognized it's genius, but this year it really got a workout (hauled 4 elk) and it is definitely a sweet deal. 3 guys in the cab and a whole elk in the bed... Saves a whole lot of sweat and tears.

Anyway thanks to the Ranger we got this big old cow back in one piece and got to work. Here's my brother doing a skinning job. It's one of the bigger cow elk we've ever killed:
P1000863.jpg

Over the next few days a total of 5 tags were filled. My brother in law James and his old roommate Tyler had tags but they could not get on any elk. Tyler had to leave after 4 days and I think he only saw 3 elk in 4 days. I spent the last 3 days with James trying to find him a cow but was unsuccessful. I think I only saw 5 elk in daylight hours the whole hunt and 4 of those were bulls. This particular hunt can get pretty tough compared to others, but it is still discouraging to hunt 7 days and not find a cow elk to shoot. Could have killed bulls easily, but no cows. So it goes sometimes, we'll be ready next year.

I can't complain too much, I got to be out for 7 days and I helped skin 5 elk. My sister shot a small bull the week before (I don't have pics :( ) so once again we're putting about 500 lbs of boneless meat in the family freezers. Good stuff. I'll leave you with some meat pics. Having meat hanging is a wonderful thing:

IMG_20121209_104130.jpg

Pile o' elk:
IMG_20121210_114006.jpg

Hope y'all have full freezers too, and good luck next year.
 
Wow! That's great that y'all got into so many animals.

I saw 3 cows for a few seconds on the opening day of my hunt, and 3 bulls the day before the end, and that was it for the whole hunt back in October.
 
wankerjake,

what hunt area is that? looks like the plateau north of flag.

murf
 
It's up in Unit 9. I think something like 15 elk had been seen collectively the first 4 days by everyone in camp. Luckily we managed to kill 5 of them. It's tough for a cow hunt, I think. Wish they would open up the late hunt in 5B south again.
 
That's some pretty country, what kind of temps were you hunting in ?

Lows at night were 10-20 degrees usually, the highs were 40-50 degrees most days. It was a fairly mild year, I think the lowest reading I saw on the hunt was 9 degrees. Last year it was right around 1 degree with highs in the 30's.
 
5b south is the best area in the state for trophy bull, imop, lots of cows,too. nice harvest and thanks for the story.

murf
 
Nice job! I was looking at the regs today to get ready to apply for next year. I haven't elk hunted in over ten years, but I plan on putting in for cow tags next year and will most likely get drawn.

You javelina hunting at all this spring?
 
My first elk was taken in unit 9 back in 07. Nice area and easy to hunt compared to the roads in 5B!

I took a spike in on 4 Dec 12 in 5B after 5 days of hunting. I'll add a write up too on our hunt in the next day or so.

BTW, I did see a decent 5x5 but he pulled the Houdini on me before I could get the rifle up to shoot. Took the spike the next day.

Thanks for sharing.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top