You will have a great time if you let yourself! Don't get caught up in the stress of the harvest and just enjoy the being there. Take a 1000 pictures as you can't ever have enough to remember hunts like this.Thanks everyone for the pictures and comments, they've been very helpful. The outfitter said bulls harvested typically score between 280 and 320. I'm looking forward to the horseback ride into camp, tent camping and meeting new hunters, harvesting an elk would be icing on the cake.
Best advice yet.The vast majority, and I mean over 80%, of the bulls taken in Wyoming every year are raghorns. "Teenagers": silly, curious 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 year old bulls. Hilltop's picture of a young bull is actually bigger than most that are killed every year, but his advice is most realistic. I'm sure none of the heros that post on the internet would stoop to such lowly elk, but anyone that tells you different is blowing smoke.
If you set yourself up to kill a 300+ bull or nothing, or even a 6 point or nothing, on your first hunt, you are setting yourself up for dissapointment. Have fun and focus on the hunt, not the kill, especially not the size of the kill on your first elk hunt.
Exactly, just as that nice 285" bow bull I posted. He's a beautiful bull, but pales in comparison to the other bull I posted that are few and far between in most areas. Anyone on their first hunt or two, unless they are big top dollar ones on the better places in the US like an Indian Reservation should be taking any good bull approaching 300" IMHO!Take a good look at the 290 European mount bull earlier in the thread. For a bull to go 300" it has got to be BIG!
I'd shoot a 280 bull any day. When the moment comes, you just need to say "big enough " and then later the tape tells you how big that is.
Your outfitter should be able to show you some pictures and say: "if you see a bull this big, you better shoot."