The Facts About Public-Land Elk

by
posted on August 12, 2014
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **

Sure, whitetails hide like rabbits when hunting pressure gets heavy, but they say when you bump elk they’ll walk right over the mountaintop. The thing is new studies show that to be true, but not necessarily. Researchers have been putting GPS collars on elk to find out exactly where they go when the hunting pressure hits. The studies have found that, sure, a lot of elk move to less-pressured private lands and hard-to-access areas, but they’ve also found some elk hiding in overlooked drainages and sections of public land that are tricky to access.

Shy Hiders
A University of Alberta-led research study published in 2012 found an elk’s personality type is a big factor in determining whether it lives through the hunting season. Data collected from GPS collars on more than 100 bull and cow elk in southwestern Alberta determined the elk could be divided into two categories: “bold runners” and “shy hiders.” The bold-runner elk, both cows and bulls, tended to move quickly throughout the study area and preferred to feed in open areas, whereas the shy hiders fed on the sparser vegetation in wooded areas and moved slower and more cautiously during daylight.Hunters killed one-third of the 45 2 1/2-year-old bulls researchers collared. Researchers were surprised when they noted all the bulls killed were previously identified by GPS data as being “bold runners.” Analysis indicated hunters were walking right by the shyer bulls.One thing this tells us is not all elk bolt over the mountaintops for private lands when hunting pressure intensifies. Some quietly find overlooked pockets to hide out in and survive.

Public-Land Hideouts
Shy bulls in the University of Alberta study tended to move into dark timber and wouldn’t expose themselves in daylight. They didn’t, however, necessarily move far away from public-access areas. If they could escape into cover hunters weren’t pushing, they’d simply hide and survive.

Similarly, Brad Petch, a senior biologist with Colorado Parks & Wildlife, says, “Our studies have found that a lot of elk move from public to private holdings to avoid hunters, but they don’t always leave the public lands. The savvier hunters learn to look for overlooked public parcels that abut or are hemmed in by less-pressured private lands. Some of the areas might be blocked off by private lands on two or three sides. You might have to climb around the private lands to access some places.”

Many elk hunters are certain more pain means more gain. Often they’re right, but not always. Land just off trailheads and roads might be hiding a bull. The small draws and drainages that don’t have pack trails crossing through them are worth checking. With public-land hunting, you have to scout the people as much as the elk.

Justin Gude, a wildlife research and technical services bureau chief for Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, says, “We’ve found that the bow season doesn’t typically change the movement patterns of elk very much, but the gun season sure does. Once the gun season opens, our studies have found that elk clearly shift to harder-to-access areas and private lands. Many of the areas in southwestern Montana are patchworks of public and private lands. Experienced hunters look for good habitat that hunters miss in the collage of terrain.” OnXmap’s Hunt app, he says, includes map data for private-land-access-program areas, such as from Montana’s Block Management Program.

“The Block Management maps can also be viewed online,” says Gude. (See Block Management maps here) “As hunters scout an area they need to know all the access and pressure points.” There’s a lot to learn. In the 2013 season, about 1,240 landowners enrolled about 7.8 million acres of land in the Block Management Program.

Gude and Petch describe elk habitat not as the vast forests and parks stretching over mountains that it looks like at first glance; it’s a massive checkerboard of private and public lands and various habitats. A hunter who understands this sees the map within the map, they say.

Rules of the Road
In fact, a Montana research study by Gude and others determined that on public lands “the density of roads open to motorized use was the strongest predictor of elk distribution.” Elk tend to avoid places where people find easy access. The study also found that hunting pressure has a greater influence on where elk spend the day than the quality of the habitat.

So when you look over your maps, take access roads into account first. Hunter access via roads had such a profound effect on elk distribution that the study even determined “standards based solely on road densities may be adequate for managing female elk distributions on public lands during the hunting periods in some areas.” That’s a bold statement.

Build Your Skills: That Smell
When you’re on foot hunting for overlooked elk on public lands you’ll know you’ve found them when your nose tells you. In the rut bulls urinate on themselves, and their glands emit pheromones that combine into a musky bull cologne. One important elk-hunting skill is learning to distinguish fresh urine from old. Old urine smells like ammonia and can hang around for days; the fresh stuff is rank and musky.

Latest

Herman Shooting Vidarr SG
Herman Shooting Vidarr SG

#SundayGunday: Spartan Vidarr Disc-Lok Bipod

On this week's #SundayGunday, we’re checking out a new entry from Spartan Precision Equipment that heralds a whole new line of gear from the innovative brand. The Vidarr bipod utilizes a brand new attachment system called Disc-Lok. Why create a whole new system, you ask? Well, if Spartan's MagnaSwitch is the ultralight QD system for hunters looking to travel light, the Disc-Lok adds a few more ounces in pursuit of extreme stability. Learn more about it in this exclusive video.

Public Opportunity on Private Land: Walk-in Access Programs

State game managers have come up with an array of walk-in access programs for private lands. These state-led initiatives partner with willing landowners to open thousands—sometimes millions—of acres of land to the public at little or no extra cost. Read on for some of the best options in the country.

Early Spring Turkey Tactics that Work

A hunter strokes the paddle on a box call emitting a loud yelp into the predawn air. The thunderous reply has blood boiling at both ends of this dance. What now? Read on for some early spring turkey tactics that work.

New for 2026: Imperial Whitetail Sorghum Select

Hunters and land managers looking to add additional feeding opportunities now have a new option: Imperial Whitetail brand Sorghum Select from the Whitetail Institute. This blend combines two premium hybrid sorghum varieties to deliver a high-yielding, palatable, nutritious grain crop.

Hunting Adventure: Pursuing the Prince of the Plains

A veteran of many safaris finally hunts the game atop his wish list. Follow along with Scott Haugen as he stalks sable through South Africa.

New for 2026: Armageddon Gear Turkey Chest Rig

Always scrambling to find the right call in one of a thousand pockets? The Armageddon Gear Turkey Chest Rig eliminates that problem by putting everything front and center, exactly where it should be.

Interests



Get the best of American Hunter delivered to your inbox.