RE: canadian moose hunt
Warrior.
If you are going to the area this summer to look at the area, don't bother too much looking for the bulls. You want to find the cows and calfs. Chances are that if they are not pushed out of the area this is where you will find the bulls come the rut. Bull Moose are not like deer and move from a bedding area to a feeding area in a pattern. The bulls will graze through one area into another taking somewhere around a week to make a round of their area. Which is a good tip for hunting them too, if you see really fresh moose tracks in a area deffinately hunt there. If they look a day or two old, I don't spend too much time there. But if the tracks look old, like a week or so I will hunt this area for a few days hoping to intercept them when they are making their rounds.
Try to watch as many different videos on moosin' and read as much as you can, and apply what you have learned on your hunt.
Is your hunt guided/or semi guided/or on your own? How many other people will be in camp moose hunting while you are there? Is this a drive-in or boat-in, or fly-in hunt? Ask your outfitter to send you some maps before you go, and have them outline any fresh cuts (if there are any in the area you are going to be hunting) hopefully there are some cuts around the area you will be hunting that are a couple years old or so. After a good cut is around a couple of years old the red willow will start to crop out which is a favorite food for the moose. Look on the maps for areas around swamps and any access that the moose might be using to travel to and from cut areas to swamps, or to other swamps. Find spots like these, and you will find moose.
Again good luck on your hunt.