Hunting Big Game Hunting Elk Hunting

Talk Like an Elk

Shorten those bugles for more success.

Outdoor Life Online Editor

Nothing was stirring at 9,000 feet on the Colorado mountain, or at least not in the part we were scanning through our binoculars. What was worse, the only sounds that drifted down the flanks of the mountain were the chattering of birds and the rustling of wind-stirred aspen leaves. Tom Schulze of Sangre de Cristo Outfitters and I had time to talk, and it was only natural that our conversation centered on elk, since that was what we were there for.

Putting down my binocular for a moment, I looked at Schulze and asked him if he agreed that in general, bull elks aren’t as vocal as they were a few years ago. “They don’t call as much,” he said. “And I think it’s because everybody and his brother is calling at them these days. They’ve learned to shut up.”

His answer got me thinking: Have bulls gone quiet because everybody is calling more or because hunters are making sounds that just aren’t realistic? Are fake-sounding elk calls putting elk off or are the operators of the calls at fault?

Calling Considerations
I’m a Montana outfitter who specializes in elk hunting. In the off-season, I participate in hunting and calling seminars throughout the West. Over the first three months of 2004, I conducted more than 30 seminars for the International Sportsman’s Expositions in places such as Denver, Salt Lake City and Phoenix. These cities are all near excellent elk-hunting areas, and, as might be expected, the local hunters who attended know their way around the high country. I surveyed the audiences during these seminars, asking each one the same question: “How many of you think elk are harder to call in today than they were ten years ago?” Regardless of the venue, almost everyone raised his hand. After watching a few thousand hands go up last winter, I concluded that calling was becoming a self-defeating enterprise for many hunters.

Despite the progress made by manufacturers in perfecting calls that sound more like an elk than an elk, hunters don’t have it any better. In fact, I suspect that the ease with which most hunters can duplicate genuine elk sounds using modern calls has led many of them to call too much.

I was a judge at the World Elk Bugling competition a couple of years ago. Sitting behind the curtain, I was amazed by what I heard. Many of the callers made realistic sounds that no doubt would have fooled any other hunter into believing that an elk was in the woods. As I listened, however, I noticed a trend in the calling. Some of the callers were executing very long, drawn-out bugles. I even timed a few bugles and grunts and noticed that some of the calls lasted 10 to 15 seconds. It would be hypocritical for me to say that I never called like that when I competed in calling contests a few years ago. However, calling to impress judges and calling to draw elk are two different situations.

[pagebreak] Timing Bugles
To answer the question, “Are hunters calling longer than elk are calling?” I decided to go to the elk. After all, they are the experts. During the last two hunting seasons, I did my own research by timing bulls bugling in the woods. A theory started to develop in my mind. Before I came to a conclusion, however, I purchased an elk-hunting video and popped it into my VCR. With my stopwatch in one hand and the remote in the other, I played the video and timed the bull bugles and grunts. What were the results? Elk bugles made by bull elk are much shorter in duration than most hunters probably realize. For example, in Knight & Hale Game Calls’ Ultimate Elk Hunting video, of the 36 bull bugles I timed, the average duration was 3.12 seconds.

There was one New Mexico bull on the Knight & Hale video that was an exception to the rule. He added a long “chuckle” to the end of his bugle, and the total time was 6.47 seconds. My experience and the video proved to my satisfaction that, on average, a bull will only bugle r three to five seconds, and it is not uncommon to hear bulls bugle for less than three seconds. Considering that today’s elk receive a good deal of hunting pressure, and probably have heard a lot of hunters calling to them in bugling season, it makes sense for hunters to shorten their calls and make the most realistic sounds they can.

Special Problems
Every gobbler that a turkey hunter yelps to doesn’t come on the run, double-gobbling. The same is true in elk hunting. Not every bull is going to announce his imminent arrival, even if he is headed your way after you bugle or cow-call to him. Tom Schulze maintains that the older a bull is, the more likely he is to come in quietly. “I believe the old bulls that are on their way down in antler growth will sometimes have a silent rut,” says Schulze. “Such bulls especially will come in silently on a hunter who is cow-calling, without ever once making a vocalization.” Consequently, it’s always a good idea to watch your back when calling, because silent bulls will come in when you least expect it.

Tune in to other sounds when you think you’re dealing with a silent bull. If you’re fairly sure he’s coming but you haven’t heard him in a while, listen for the sound of squirrels barking. Just as squirrels bark at you when you cross their path, they also bark at elk that stomp through their territory. Listen for the sounds of an approaching bull breaking limbs underfoot as he walks, destroying a sapling or generally raising a fuss as he moves closer.

[pagebreak] Toning Down Cow Calls
Over the last few years the trend among elk callers has been to do more cow-calling and less bugling. But you might still let bulls know that something is amiss if you do too much cow-calling. How much is too much? Every situation is different, and what might work one time might not work as well the next. One surefire way to bring in more bulls is to sound like one or two different cows. If you’re hunting with a partner, spread out and call softly back and forth to each other. If you’re hunting alone, use two calls that sound different from each other, and move a bit from side to side between calls.

However, the last thing you want to do is call continuously or, by varying calls, sound like an entire herd of cows. When you believe the distance between you and the bull has been cut to 500 yards, make one or two more soft cow calls. Then shut up. If you and your partner continue to cow-call too aggressively and sound like 10 different cows as a bull comes in, the bull will become suspicious and might hang up.

Bulls expect cows to do certain things and to follow a formula of vocalizations-nothing more, nothing less. A bull generally knows what is roaming around in his territory, and suddenly being confronted by the possibility that 10 cows have shown up miraculously during peak rut might be too much for him to accept.

Perfecting Your Calling
Making one call at the right time will accomplish more than calling continuously. Be coy; play a cat-and-mouse game with a bull. Cow-call once and then silently move closer to him and perhaps a bit to the side. Do not continuously call from one position if he is answering you on a regular basis.

If he knows exactly where you are, he doesn’t have as much incentive to come looking for you. Exercise restraint: Don’t answer a bull every time he bugles. Some hunters seem to have the mind-set that they paid $15 for an elk call, and, by golly, they’re going to use it. Make a bull work for your responses. By doing so, you might “fire up” a bull to the point that he will be more aggressive when coming in and be more likely to make mistakes that will benefit you.

Being frugal with your calling isn’t the same as being completely silent.

Silence on your part can make a bull more cautious when approaching you, especially in thick cover. Elk are not the quietest animals when moving through the woods, unless they are trying to sneak. They break stuff, they knock things around. For better results, mix in similar sound effects with your cow-calling. For example, to imitate feeding elk, try pulling up grass or rolling a small rock down a hill.

Don’t get carried away; just try to imagine a few cow elk moving through the woods and mimic the sound they might make as they travel. They’re walking, not stampeding.

Timing Is Everything
The phase of rut you’re hunting directly affects how bulls will respond to calling. A hunter will have more success by limiting his calling and using the right call at the right time. Inject some rhyme and reason into your calling. Don’t just blow a call to see what happens. While practicing your bugling for the upcoming season, time yourself. You might be surprised by just how long you make an individual call last. A shortened, properly executed bugle sounded at the right moment could make the difference between packing out a bull or going home with an unused tag.

Bull elk are the real pros when it comes to bugling and translating cow calls. Follow their lead. over. Elk are not the quietest animals when moving through the woods, unless they are trying to sneak. They break stuff, they knock things around. For better results, mix in similar sound effects with your cow-calling. For example, to imitate feeding elk, try pulling up grass or rolling a small rock down a hill.

Don’t get carried away; just try to imagine a few cow elk moving through the woods and mimic the sound they might make as they travel. They’re walking, not stampeding.

Timing Is Everything
The phase of rut you’re hunting directly affects how bulls will respond to calling. A hunter will have more success by limiting his calling and using the right call at the right time. Inject some rhyme and reason into your calling. Don’t just blow a call to see what happens. While practicing your bugling for the upcoming season, time yourself. You might be surprised by just how long you make an individual call last. A shortened, properly executed bugle sounded at the right moment could make the difference between packing out a bull or going home with an unused tag.

Bull elk are the real pros when it comes to bugling and translating cow calls. Follow their lead.