OCTOBER ELK HUNTING | IDENTIFYING BEDDING TO FEEDING PATTERNS FOR SUCCESS | ποΈ EP. 65
Description
When the rut ends and the mountains go quiet, most hunters think October is a dead zone. But the truth is, itβs one of the best times to tag a bullβif you understand bedding-to-feeding patterns.
In this episode of Backbone Unlimited, Matt Hartsky breaks down how elk transition from the chaos of September to the calculated survival mode of October. Youβll learn how post-rut elk behavior shifts once bulls are worn down and focused on food, cover, and safety, and why mastering these bedding-to-feeding patterns gives you the biggest edge of the season.
Matt walks through everything that drives elk movement in Octoberβhow bedding areas change with elevation, slope, thermals, and pressure; what bulls and cows are eating as high-country feed dries up; and how to pinpoint the travel corridors that link bed and feed. He also explains how to time your hunts for morning and evening movement, how weather and moon phase affect elk activity, and why reading the wind and terrain is the difference between success and a blown stalk.
Youβll also hear about proven strategies for ambush setups, intercept plays, and still-hunting travel routes that work when bugles have gone silent. Matt outlines the biggest mistakes hunters make this time of yearβlike calling too aggressively or sticking to obvious spotsβand how to adapt to changing conditions before snow and pressure push elk out of your reach.
If youβre serious about October elk hunting and want to fill your tag when others have packed it in, this episode will teach you how to think like a recovering bullβefficient, cautious, and predictableβand how to use that mindset to turn quiet mountains into high-odds encounters.



