Posts: 1,386
Threads: 0
Joined: Sep 2008
Reputation:
0
I've never hunted cats but I know there are cats around Taylor mountain, Heise/Kelly canyon area and in the river bottoms around Shelly and firth. I haven't seen any tracks on the ski hill so far this year so if you go that way I imagine you'd need a sled or skis to get back towards them.
[signature]
Posts: 38
Threads: 0
Joined: Mar 2013
Reputation:
0
I would hunt them the same way you would with dogs. Find a fresh track.
After a fresh snow, preferably the night before, take off driving/walking and cover ground. If you have access to a ranger/snowmobile/fourwheeler or whatever, you can cover a lot of miles in the first hours of the morning. I would start an hour before daylight. If you are in a pickup, even earlier since you can stay warm.
When you find a fresh track, follow it. Glass ahead as much as possible.
I am no expert, but if I were after cats without dogs, this is how I would approach it. Try not to get too discouraged.
I would guess that this (spot and stalk mountain lion) is the toughest hunt for any of the North American big game species.
[signature]
Posts: 208
Threads: 0
Joined: Apr 2009
Reputation:
0
ya its gonna be rough
[signature]
Posts: 76
Threads: 0
Joined: Mar 2009
Reputation:
0
go over to monstermuleys.com in the Idaho forum. some guy just posted a story about this type of hunt. he and his buddy did a spot and stalk and got a double!! there's a crazy part in that story that is worth the read, even if you're not a cat hunter.
edit:
actually, here's the link. hope it works.
[url "http://www.monstermuleys.info/dcforum/DCForumID37/2382.html"]http://www.monstermuleys.info/dcforum/DCForumID37/2382.html[/url]
[signature]