Utah State Flag

North Slope

Last Updated: Jun 9, 2024
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Quick Tips

  • Excellent fishing for pan-size trout
  • Hundreds of clear lakes and dozens of streams
  • Cell phone service is spotty with areas that have no service
speciesgeneral Sizetrophy potential
Mule Deer140"-160"160"+

On The Ground

Located in the northeast part of Utah, this unit has healthy herds of mule deer. The unit borders Wyoming on the north border. Some deer winter in the other states, but typically are in Utah during the hunting seasons.

Mule deer are found throughout the entire unit, but can be spotty on where you find them. This is a general season deer unit with a Limited Entry season. There are still some good bucks harvested every year.

Terrain

This unit is the North Slope of the High Uintas, the highest mountain range in Utah and the biggest East-West range in the Lower 48. Some peaks are more than 12,000 feet above sea level, and there are a few peaks over 13,000 feet. Some trailheads are more than 10,000 feet high. Timberline is at about 11,000 feet in most areas. Foothills trail off into Wyoming and oversee sagebrush flats that are at elevations of 7,000-7,500 feet.

  • Roughly 1,224 square miles

  • 89% public land

  • Elevations from 7,000-13,528 feet

Low elevations have sage and grassy flats with hay meadows, some private alfalfa fields and willow and cottonwood-lined creeks. Middle elevations consist mainly of sage and grassy ridges with pines, firs, aspens and spruces on north slopes with aspens, bitterbrush, serviceberry and junipers on south slopes. High elevations above 11,000 feet have alpine meadows and slopes, short spruce and other low bushes. From 10,000-11,000 feet are heavy timber of conifers with scattered meadows and creeks that sometimes spread a quarter mile wide with willows and swampy muskeg.

Most of the area is designated wilderness, so you must walk or ride horses. Maintained trails lead south up every major drainage and on major ridges and to most high peaks. Popular access roads include Highway 150 south of Evanston and the Spirit Lake access road west of McKinnon, Wyoming.

  • ATVs are not necessary, pickups can access most public roads

  • Carry a GPS with extra batteries and a compass

  • Some peaks require 40-mile round-trip hikes

Most hunters camp in unimproved campgrounds or along dirt roads. Backpack hunters usually camp near streams or lakes. Motels are in Manila as well as in Evanston, Wyoming; both towns are a good distance from most deer areas.

  • Be familiar with camping regulations in the wilderness

  • Bear River Lodge offers cabin and lodge accommodations in the west

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