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How Steve Byers Learned to Hunt Elk and What Equipment He Uses

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byers-day3-2Editor’s Note: Mossy Oak Pro Steve Byers of Delta, Colorado, has been on the Mossy Oak Pro Staff for 6 years. He's been talking to elk and hunting elk since he was 3-years old and began cow calling to elk with his natural voice at age 5. But by the time he turned 13, his voice changed, and he started using diaphragm calls and bugles. Much of Byers’ knowledge and training in the art of elk hunting came from his dad. Today he operates Bullseye Bowhunting Guide Service (http://www.bullseyebowhunt.com).

I’m 45-years old, and I started elk hunting with my dad 42 years ago. Today, I still mix in a little bit of cow calling with my natural voice when I'm using a diaphragm cow call. Besides cow calls, I can chirp and bugle with my natural voice. But to be honest, my natural voice isn’t very good at bugling.

byers-day3-3I'm somewhat different from most elk hunters when it comes to camo patterns. I prefer to use Mossy Oak Brush instead of any of the Break-Up patterns that Mossy Oak produces. Mossy Oak Brush is a very-open pattern, and I hunt open country, and numbers of sagebrush flats. One minute I may be out in the sagebrush, and the next minute I may be in oak brush. Then, the elk may move into the aspens. So, I need great versatility in the camo pattern I use. I like the fact that Brush doesn’t have a lot of dark shadows in the pattern, since I feel there are enough shadows and shades in the places I hunt. As an elk hunter, I tend to stay in the shadows when I'm hunting.

I have a guide service called Bullseye Bowhunting (http://www.bullseyebowhunt.com). We hunt in western Colorado in Units 62, 64 and 30. I take about eight bowhunters every year. My very first bow was a hand-me-down from my dad, a Bear Polar 66-inch recurve bow. I started shooting that bow when I was about 4-feet tall. Because of the size of the bow, and since I was so little, I couldn’t shoot it upright. I had to cant the bow and learn to shoot like that. But I shot that bow until I was a teenager. Every bow that my dad gave me was a left-handed bow, because my dad was left handed. I shot left-handed, until I was about 16. Then because I'm right-handed, I switched over to a right-handed bow.

byers-day3-4Right now, I'm shooting a right-handed PSE Brute, one of the least-expensive PSE bows. I have three teenaged sons, ages 18, 17 and 16. So, when they can’t find their bows, they get my bow. As soon as all three of those boys graduate from high school and move out of the house, I’ll be able to get me a really-nice bow. But to buy four new bows for a year gets kind of pricey. I really like the brace height on the PSE Brute. For around $400, you get a lot of bow for your money with the Brute. I also like the PSE bows because of the accessories they have that match-up with their bows.

Yesterday: Mossy Oak Pro Steve Byers on the Biggest Bull He’s Ever Called and How to Call Elk
Tomorrow: Steve Byers Takes a Bull’s Temperature

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