Just a comment on the " Miseries" that motivate Elk to move. Their biggest PEST is flies, and the reason they move up to the timber line or above is to find a place where the winds blow the flies off them, or its cold at night for the flies to live very long. Elk will spend the day on the south Slope taking in the sun for warmth.
If you have deep, narrow canyons, where the heat of the sun does not reach until later in the day, and with that rise in heat, comes an increase in updrafts, and wind speed. Both cause the flies to leave, or be blown away. Some Elk are known to seek these low areas to beat the flies, while others, who live in areas of high mountains, will climb above the treeline for relief.
Part of the "trick" to scouting is playing " Let's Pretend " we are an [elk]! Learn what you can about their daily living, from field guides, and from personal observation. learn what their natural predators are, and look for those predators, their tracks, and sign. ( Mountain lions, and Grizzly bears kill elk, along with the Wolf packs introduced in certain areas of the West.) Learn Why it is that Elk will move so high in the Summer, but come down from those high altitudes as soon as the Temperatures drop, and the first snows come to the peaks.
There is an old saying about hunting that goes,
"Don't hunt where the game Ain't!"
The whole point of scouting is to find out where the game is and understand Why they are there, instead of someplace else. That may seem intuitive to most members, but we have a lot of young hunters reading these posts who have never had these things explained to them.
If the archery hunters are overwhelming an area during their early season, you need to be out there with them, to see where and when the Elk move. :hmm: :thumbsup: