Skip to main content

The Flat Tire Roosevelt Elk

lee-day2-1

lee-day2-2Editor’s Note: Mike Lee, formerly from Montana but now living in Oregon, has been on the Mossy Oak Pro Staff for 3 years. He's been hunting elk for about 38 years - both on Montana and Oregon public lands. His favorite pattern is Mossy Oak Treestand. According to Lee, “Because I like to work from the ridgeline of mountains down to the lower elevations, I hunt in trees and dark timber most of the time. So, if I'm calling an elk from down below me, more than likely, I’ll meet him in the timber. That’s why I feel Mossy Oak Treestand is the best pattern for me.” We don’t have any personal photos of Mike because after he was interviewed for this info, his small daughter “washed” is iPad in the bathtub for him.

At this point, I need to explain that I’m primarily a meat hunter. Usually, I don’t pass up any legal elk I can harvest. My family and I love to eat elk. An elk in the freezer really saves on our grocery bill. The best Oregon bull I've ever taken was a Roosevelt elk that scored about 270 points. The Roosevelt elk differs from the Rocky Mountain elk, because they like to stay on the western side of Oregon in the deep canyons that I call rain forests, remain closer to the tree line than the Rocky Mountain elk do and rarely like to be in open places.

lee-day2-3On this particular hunt, I had found a herd of elk that I had attempted to catch up to the previous day. The next morning I was a little late getting to the hunting spot where I wanted to start hunting. So, I wasn’t able to catch up with the elk that morning. I took a break in the afternoon. In the late afternoon, another hunter had come in upwind of the herd and spooked the elk. I hiked back to my truck and got there a little bit before dark. The next morning I was determined to get out of camp early. But then as luck would have it, I had a flat tire on my truck. I fixed the tire and stopped by a gas station for some fuel. Although I only live about an hour from where I wanted to hunt, I was still late getting to the woods. While driving to where I wanted to leave my truck, I spotted a herd of elk crossing a ridgeline about two ridges over from where I’d planned to hunt. I parked my truck, grabbed my gear and ran across a canyon to cut off this herd of elk. As soon as I got over the top of the second ridge, I saw the elk - about 15 in the herd - moving in the bottom of the canyon. The biggest bull was the last animal in the herd and had two smaller bulls running with him, because the rut was over. I only had an 80-yard shot.

lee-day2-4Back then I was shooting a 7mm Magnum. But since that time, I've built a custom .338 Edge. Don’t get me wrong. The 7mm Mag is accurate out to long ranges. However, the .338 allows me to shoot a bigger bullet and deliver more energy down range to put a bull down quicker. Once my elk was down, I boned him out and only had to pack the meat out about 1-1/2-miles.

I'm often asked, “How do you butcher your elk in the field?” My pack will hold 80 - 100 pounds on each trip. So, once the meat is boned out, I usually only have to make two trips to carry the meat out, and I make a third trip to carry the head out.

For information on making jerky from your elk and other big game animals to provide a protein-rich snack, you can download a free book.

Yesterday: Combat Hunting for Elk
Tomorrow: Skinning Elk

Combat Hunting for Elk with Mossy Oak Pro Mike Lee
Combat hunting is my definition for hunting on high-pressure public lands where the chances of seeing other hunters is much greater than the opportunity to see an elk. To understand this kind of hunting, understanding what most elk hunters do is often more important than knowing where the elk should be. For instance, most elk hunters don’t like to leave camp until about an hour before daylight. But I leave camp about...

Latest Content