Colorado State Flag

Unit 17

Last Updated: Feb 20, 2025
  • Share on Twitter

  • Share on Facebook

  • Email

Topographic Loading Image

A map error has occurred


Quick Tips

  • Visit Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge
  • Try fly fishing at private Trout Valley Fishing Club
  • View moose at State Forest State Park
speciesgeneral Sizetrophy potential
Mule Deer150"-170"170"+
Elk260"-300"300"+
Antelope60"-70"70"+

On The Ground

From the Continental Divide in the Rabbit Ears Range to Walden, this unit supports good numbers of elk, deer and antelope on private and public land. Hunters should be in good shape to hunt the high country, much of it 10,000-11,000 feet above sea level.

There are plenty of bull elk. There is a late September deer rifle season.

Terrain

The southern boundary is the Continental Divide as it runs through the Rabbit Ears Range, which features several rugged peaks and ridges from 11,000-12,296 feet above sea level. Between 11,000-foot Arapahoe Ridge and Green Ridge are the drainages of Buffalo and Lost creeks, which flow north through narrow, brush-choked canyons. A number of small lakes dot the landscape along the northern boundary of the national forest. Between 9,000 and 11,000 feet in elevations are steep, rocky slopes, high alpine basins and windswept saddles. North of Rand are high, arid plains with rolling hills, gulches and creek bottoms.

  • Roughly 850 square miles

  • 62.9% public land

  • Elevations from 8,027-12,296 feet

Near Walden, which is just off the northern tip of the unit, are flats and hills that support sagebrush, buckbrush and bitterbrush with some willows along creeks and irrigation ditches. As the land rises south into foothills, there are juniper/pinyon, cottonwood, oak brush and some pines and aspens. Hayfields are visible from Colorado Highway 125 near Rand. On ridges grow Gambel oaks, sagebrush, ponderosa pines and aspens. Dark timber on north slopes is a mixture of lodgepole pine, Engelmann spruce, Douglas fir and blue spruce.

Routt National Forest Service Roads 106 and 715 travel to Green Ridge while Road 700 heads toward Arapahoe Creek. Colorado Route 14 from Muddy Creek Pass intersects with County Road 28 about five miles south of Walden, crossing the unit and meeting Colorado Route 125 near the southern end of MacFarlane Reservoir State Trust land.

Travel on MacFarlane Reservoir State Trust Land is restricted. Roads are closed from Oct. 15 to the end of regular big game rifle seasons. To retrieve game, hunters may travel on designated routes between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. and 30 minutes after sunset until midnight.

  • Good access to Routt National Forest

  • Private land prevents access to some BLM land

  • Four wheel drive needed in bad weather

Camping is allowed at Seymour Lake State Wildlife Area, in the Routt National Forest and on BLM land. Several motels, including North Park Inn and Suites, are in Walden, where hunters also can buy fuel or enjoy eating at restaurants, such as local favorite Red Rock Cafe.

High

Low

March 2025


Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat

23

24

25

26

27

28

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

1

2

3

4

5

insider access

Become a member to access this content

Only Insiders can access this content. For premium hunting content, tips & tricks, and access to our full suite of hunting tools, become an Insider today.

Already have an account?

Log in

insider Membership

Our top tier membership gives you everything we offer! Research tool, maps, and gear shop rewards, all in one plan.