Editor’s Note: Avid outdoorsman Chad Schearer co-hosts “Shoot Straight with Chad Schearer,” with his wife, Marsha, and his two sons, Walker and Wyatt, which airs on the Sportsman Channel, Fox Sports South and CBS in Montana. He owned and guided for Central Montana Outfitters for 15 years.
Question: Chad, where have you guided for elk?
Schearer: I’ve guided and hunted for elk in Montana, New Mexico and Idaho.
Question: With elk season starting in October, what does an elk hunter need to do now to get ready for elk season?
Schearer: The biggest key to taking an elk with muzzleloader is being able to get to the elk. Now’s the time to start getting in shape for elk season. You need to start walking several miles a day. If you’re really serious about getting in shape, you can’t beat riding a mountain bike. Don’t use the mountain bike only for leisurely rides. You’ve got to push your body to some extremes when you’re peddling that bike, which means to peddle on the bike most of the time.
But before you begin getting into shape for elk season, I strongly recommend you have a checkup
with your doctor to make sure your heart can handle a stressful elk hunt. In some places you hunt elk, you may be going up 10,000 feet or more where the oxygen is thinner. On some hunts, you may have to walk 8 to 10 miles to catch up to the elk. So you really need to be in shape for that kind of physical hunting. If you don’t live in a place with steep mountains or high elevation, you can get in shape by going to a football stadium and climbing those stairs, or by finding some deep draws and climb those draws. You really need to be walking up and down steep terrain, because more than likely, that’s the kind of terrain you’ll have to hunt to take a nice elk. If you’ll be riding a horse, I’d strongly recommend you go to a stable and start riding horses some right now. You use different muscles when you’re riding than when you’re walking. So, you need to get your riding muscles in shape. When you go elk hunting with a muzzleloader, you want to be able to do what you have to do in order to find and take the elk you came out to hunt.
Question: As we get our bodies in shape, what should we be doing with our Muzzleloader rifles to practice for elk season? What rifle, powder and bullets do you recommend for elk hunting?
Schearer: I use two rifles for elk hunting – the CVA Accura and the CVA Apex. Now’s the time to start shooting your gun and learning which powder and bullet your gun shoots most accurately. Also, you need to know what restrictions blackpowder hunters are under in the area where you’ll be hunting. For instance, if you’re going to hunt elk in Colorado, you have to use loose powder and PowerBelt bullets, but you can’t use any saboted types of bullets. You also have to use open sights and can’t use a riflescope. When you’re shooting open sights, more than likely, you won’t be shooting over 100 yards. If I’m hunting in Colorado, I’ll use 100 to 120 grains of loose Pyrodex powder and a 338-grain bullet. However, if I’m hunting in New Mexico or Arizona, I’ll probably be shooting a .45 CVA rifle, because a .45 is really a flat-shooting gun that I feel is better than the .50 when you’re shooting in flat terrain. If I’m shooting the .45 caliber, I’ll shoot a magnum charge of .150 grains of pelleted powder. I’ll use a 275-grain PowerBelt bullet, and I can shoot out to 200 yards with this load. I like to use a Winchester Triple Se7en Primer.







May 13th, 2010 by admin 









