When I have a bull respond to me, if I’m guiding a bowhunter, as I start calling back to the bull, I’ll ask the bowhunter to nock an arrow. Within about 4 minutes, that bull came in to where we were. Across the draw from where we’d been calling, we heard a bull start chuckling about 400-yards away. In-between our calling, we’d stop and listen. Larry would bugle off to his right, and I would bugle off to my left, and we mixed in numbers of calf and cow calls. Then we can sound like a whole herd of elk, because we know there’s elk in this area.” So, Larry and I bugled back and forth when we were within 25 yards of each other. In the middle of bugling, let’s start giving some cow calls. Let’s bugle back and forth like bull elk challenging each other. We sat down for lunch, and Larry said, “Let’s start sounding like two bulls up here on the top of this mountain. At the first of the season, the weather was really hot, and the elk weren’t bugling. Jones in the Gila National Forest near Reserve, New Mexico ( ). Also, you can look forward to John’s latest elk book, available July 1, 2018, titled, “Elk: Keys to 25 Hunters’ Success.”Ībout 25-years ago, I had an opportunity to hunt with Larry D. Too, you can learn about John’s other available elk books at. To get John and Denise Phillips’ free cookbook, “Miz Denise’s Outdoor Cooking: More than 35 Recipes for Elk and Mule Deer,” go to. This week we’ll learn how to get ready for elk season, and why Ramos calls the way he calls. Editor’s Note: Ralph Ramos from Las Cruces, New Mexico, is an elk guide, Ramos teaches a different form of elk calling – aggressive calling that’s had proven success.
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