A couple of questions, but super you have shared with us and others this year for sure.
The G3 mule deer behaviors always changing it seems to me. Seen Inyo County 4 pointers at 7500 to 4000 feet around December first. Some 100 feet from the road. Why one might consider G3 a kill zone?
I did not make it to G3 this year before the hunt. So, the following questions? Just curious?
Did you see mule deer bucks next to the roads? If so were any shooters? To me shooters are 4 points or better?
Did you see bucks at any quality at elevations like 4 to 6 thousand feet?
How were the dirt roads after last winter and hurricane this August, any washouts you encountered?
I never even took a look near the roads. I’ve done this hunt several times before helping friends that have had tags. Never have I seen anything over the usual 22-24”, 4 year olds with ok mass from a road. However, using big optics, we can always find that next age class up by covering country and looking way, way out there…. Typically we spot big deer at distances measured by miles, not yards.
Unless a hunter has the right equipment, the physical ability, and, most importantly, the right mindset, finding and then getting to the big, mature bucks in this hunt unit is beyond the capability of the typical “Max point” hunters that draw. I’d be willing to bet that the average age of tag holders is probably in the 60s. I don’t know many people of that age category that don’t have at least some ailment that would hinder them on a hunt like this.
Years ago, you could shoot great bucks like this by just driving the roads… especially if there was enough snow to cover up the food sources higher up the mountain. But in this day and age, that just isn’t the case.
From where we parked my vehicle on a main road, it was about 3 1/2 miles to where we found this deer as the crow flies… However, it’s not an easy 3 1/2 miles… Probably more like 6 to 7 with all the bobbing and weaving, you have to do around the boot grabbing bitter brush. If you want to kill big bucks, you gotta go where the can grow old and that’s not within sight of a road where a hunter can just step out of a pick up or off of a quad and pop them.