Understanding the Lehigh Controled fracturing bullets.
#21
Nontypical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Saxonburg Pa
Posts: 3,925
#22
You don't! Why not. They are wild animals. Not like they are in a high fence. Yeah there are people around and some are used to them. But there are still areas where they react to humans the way they do anywhere else.
I've been on 3 elk hunts already and never saw anything I wanted to release an arrow or drop the hammer on. I just never tried CO. I keep trying for WY and I've been to ID and MT for them.
I've been on 3 elk hunts already and never saw anything I wanted to release an arrow or drop the hammer on. I just never tried CO. I keep trying for WY and I've been to ID and MT for them.
#24
Nontypical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Saxonburg Pa
Posts: 3,925
You don't! Why not. They are wild animals. Not like they are in a high fence. Yeah there are people around and some are used to them. But there are still areas where they react to humans the way they do anywhere else.
I've been on 3 elk hunts already and never saw anything I wanted to release an arrow or drop the hammer on. I just never tried CO. I keep trying for WY and I've been to ID and MT for them.
I've been on 3 elk hunts already and never saw anything I wanted to release an arrow or drop the hammer on. I just never tried CO. I keep trying for WY and I've been to ID and MT for them.
#25
Gotta agree with Tom and Pete on this one Clem. I too was around those elk many times and could dang near walk up and pet every one I saw. Give them about 5 more years of being hunted seriously and they will start to be how they are supposed to be. As of now, they are still just too acclimated to human interactions.