A Puget Sound Energy utility worker caught hundreds of elk crossing a road near Ellensburg recently.

https://patch.com/washington/across-wa/river-elk-stream-across-eastern-washington-road-video
ELLENSBURG, WA – Hundreds of elk were caught on camera crossing a rural road outside Ellensburg recently, appearing like a furry, brown river flowing across the snowy high desert landscape.
A Puget Sound Energy worker filmed the elk as they crossed a road near the Wild Horse Wind and Solar facility, about 15 miles east of Ellensburg.
Two types of elk live in Washington. The larger Roosevelt elk live mainly on the Olympic Peninsula and west of I-5. The elk in the video are likely Rocky Mountain elk, whose range stretches across the state, from the woods and mountaintops of the Cascades to the grassy deserts that stretch east to Idaho.
Winter is primarily a food-finding season for elk. After the mating “rut” in fall, elk seek out shrubs and grasses to eat before elk calves are born in spring.
Reblogged this on Committee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog.
A beautiful migration – I hope the Elmer Fudds weren’t waiting. ;(
Not ’till fall…