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Smokey Crews Lessons from a Lifetime of Bowhunting: Bulls, Bears, and Hard-Won Wisdom

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Manage episode 513351944 series 3592024
Content provided by Aaron & Dave. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Aaron & Dave or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

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Some hunts hinge on perfect gear. Most hinge on better judgment. We sit down with Smokey Crews to unpack the quiet moves that turn a fleeting chance into a clean kill—why he swears by a Chuck Adams side quiver through thick coastal brush, how a “60-yard” caribou needed a lower hold despite a correct range, and what really happens when a big Roosevelt bull makes that straight-line “death run” into huckleberries. It’s part campfire, part masterclass, and full of the hard-earned notes you won’t find on a glossy gear ad.
We follow Smokey through family drives where a forgotten quiver forced patience, bear baits that vanished minutes after being set, and an opening-day elk that proved bugles can switch on in late August. He lays out a timeline most hunters miss: bulls often start talking around the 20th—22nd, and they’re far easier to call before they’ve been educated by road-landing bugles and preseason “practice.” We contrast side quiver versus bow quiver in real terms—brush clearance, balance, and groups at 50—then bridge into the mental game: most people want a shot; disciplined hunters want a hit. The difference shows up in when you draw, how you hold, and whether you listen when the caller says “move now.”
But this isn’t theory. We get locker weights that challenge assumptions (a skinned Roosevelt bull still hanging at 500 pounds), practical blood-trailing through thick understory, and a candid look at access: caribou herds walking by camp, whitetails on bait, private-land mule deer regrets, and creative bartering with guides to make dream hunts real. Smokey’s stories double as checklists—protect wild behavior, avoid educating animals, communicate ranges as they change, and act before the window closes.
If you’re chasing elk, bears, caribou, or deer—and want fewer “almosts” and more clean, ethical kills—this conversation will sharpen your decisions on day one. Press play, subscribe for more field-tested tactics, and share your biggest early-season lesson or calling mistake with us. We read every note and might feature yours next time.

Support the show

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Smokey Crews Lessons from a Lifetime of Bowhunting: Bulls, Bears, and Hard-Won Wisdom (00:00:00)

2. Welcome & Listener Feedback (00:00:19)

3. Quivers, Accuracy, and Shot Priorities (00:00:44)

4. Family Hunts and Forgotten Gear (00:03:22)

5. Caribou at “60 Yards” and the Third Arrow (00:04:50)

6. Bear Bait, Beef Heads, and Lessons Learned (00:06:46)

7. Scouting Roosevelt Bulls and Opening-Day Kill (00:08:36)

8. When Elk Start Bugling: August Reality (00:12:54)

9. Don’t Educate Elk: Bad Preseason Calling (00:14:34)

10. Big Weights, Roosevelt vs. Shiras Moose (00:16:19)

11. Favorite Hunts: Caribou, Whitetail, Mule Deer (00:19:06)

12. Access, Costs, and Passing on a Deal (00:22:34)

13. Near-World-Record Goats and Guides (00:24:34)

14. Bartering Hunts and Making Deals (00:28:29)

15. What Pros Don’t Say on Stage (00:29:57)

16. When Hunters Won’t Listen (00:31:24)

17. Calling Bulls Six Times and Finishing (00:35:48)

18. Wrap-Up and Parting Thoughts (00:38:05)

64 episodes

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Manage episode 513351944 series 3592024
Content provided by Aaron & Dave. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Aaron & Dave or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

Some hunts hinge on perfect gear. Most hinge on better judgment. We sit down with Smokey Crews to unpack the quiet moves that turn a fleeting chance into a clean kill—why he swears by a Chuck Adams side quiver through thick coastal brush, how a “60-yard” caribou needed a lower hold despite a correct range, and what really happens when a big Roosevelt bull makes that straight-line “death run” into huckleberries. It’s part campfire, part masterclass, and full of the hard-earned notes you won’t find on a glossy gear ad.
We follow Smokey through family drives where a forgotten quiver forced patience, bear baits that vanished minutes after being set, and an opening-day elk that proved bugles can switch on in late August. He lays out a timeline most hunters miss: bulls often start talking around the 20th—22nd, and they’re far easier to call before they’ve been educated by road-landing bugles and preseason “practice.” We contrast side quiver versus bow quiver in real terms—brush clearance, balance, and groups at 50—then bridge into the mental game: most people want a shot; disciplined hunters want a hit. The difference shows up in when you draw, how you hold, and whether you listen when the caller says “move now.”
But this isn’t theory. We get locker weights that challenge assumptions (a skinned Roosevelt bull still hanging at 500 pounds), practical blood-trailing through thick understory, and a candid look at access: caribou herds walking by camp, whitetails on bait, private-land mule deer regrets, and creative bartering with guides to make dream hunts real. Smokey’s stories double as checklists—protect wild behavior, avoid educating animals, communicate ranges as they change, and act before the window closes.
If you’re chasing elk, bears, caribou, or deer—and want fewer “almosts” and more clean, ethical kills—this conversation will sharpen your decisions on day one. Press play, subscribe for more field-tested tactics, and share your biggest early-season lesson or calling mistake with us. We read every note and might feature yours next time.

Support the show

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Smokey Crews Lessons from a Lifetime of Bowhunting: Bulls, Bears, and Hard-Won Wisdom (00:00:00)

2. Welcome & Listener Feedback (00:00:19)

3. Quivers, Accuracy, and Shot Priorities (00:00:44)

4. Family Hunts and Forgotten Gear (00:03:22)

5. Caribou at “60 Yards” and the Third Arrow (00:04:50)

6. Bear Bait, Beef Heads, and Lessons Learned (00:06:46)

7. Scouting Roosevelt Bulls and Opening-Day Kill (00:08:36)

8. When Elk Start Bugling: August Reality (00:12:54)

9. Don’t Educate Elk: Bad Preseason Calling (00:14:34)

10. Big Weights, Roosevelt vs. Shiras Moose (00:16:19)

11. Favorite Hunts: Caribou, Whitetail, Mule Deer (00:19:06)

12. Access, Costs, and Passing on a Deal (00:22:34)

13. Near-World-Record Goats and Guides (00:24:34)

14. Bartering Hunts and Making Deals (00:28:29)

15. What Pros Don’t Say on Stage (00:29:57)

16. When Hunters Won’t Listen (00:31:24)

17. Calling Bulls Six Times and Finishing (00:35:48)

18. Wrap-Up and Parting Thoughts (00:38:05)

64 episodes

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