Podcasts & off-road misadventures from the Pacific Northwest — successes and blunders

The Road Hunter Podcast

The Elk Woods + Oregon Blacktail Preseason – The Road Hunter Podcast

3 min read Brad McKinney
The Road Hunter Podcast

The Elk Woods + Oregon Blacktail Preseason – The Road Hunter Podcast

0:00 0:37:48

In this episode of the Road Hunter Podcast, we break down the excitement and challenges of the upcoming Oregon Blacktail season. Eli also shares stories from time spent in the elk woods with Jacob and Blake. Even though they got skunked, the laughs and memories made it a hunt to remember. Tune in for hunting stories, season prep, and good times with the crew! #RoadHunterPodcast #OregonBlacktail #ElkHunting #PublicLandHunting #HuntingStories #BlacktailDeer #ElkSeason #OregonHunting

Hunter standing at the edge of dense elk timber before preseason
Standing at the edge of preseason elk timber.

Related: blacktail grey ghosts.

Dialing in Thermals Before Blacktail Season

With blacktail season closing in, we’ve been re-evaluating old sits based on thermals, not just wind. A spot that produced a doe two seasons in a row on the same approach didn’t work the same way the second time: the deer came up a different finger entirely because the wind was right but the thermals weren’t pulling scent the way we expected. Wind direction tells you part of the story; thermals during morning heat-up tell you the rest.

A Bear Encounter on a Normally Reliable Road

We were upland bird hunting on a road that’s normally productive and found fresh bear sign right where we usually find grouse. No birds that day: just a reminder that fresh bear poop on a familiar road is worth paying attention to, even if you’re not actively bear hunting.

Trail Camera Patience

We’ve got a camera soaking on a known travel corridor with bull elk pictures already on it, and every fiber of us wants to go check it constantly. We won’t: every trip in leaves scent and changes how animals use that saddle. The plan is to leave it alone until after season and refresh it once snow clears in spring.

  • Evaluate sits by thermals as well as wind: morning heat-up changes how scent moves uphill
  • Fresh bear sign on a familiar road is reason enough to stay alert, even off-season for predators
  • Resist checking a productive trail camera too often: repeated visits change animal movement patterns

FAQ: Preseason Blacktail Scouting

What’s the difference between hunting wind and hunting thermals?

Wind is the prevailing air movement; thermals are caused by temperature changes pulling air uphill in the morning as it warms and downhill in the evening as it cools. Both carry scent and need to be accounted for separately when planning an approach.

How often should I check a trail camera before hunting season?

As infrequently as possible. Every visit introduces human scent into the area, which can push mature animals to alter their travel patterns right before the season you’re trying to scout for.

Get out and get your plan dialed in before opening day: thanks for listening, and good luck out there.

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