Quick Tips
- Lots of Chukar at times
- Let your optics do your walking
- Lots of tout fishing found throughout this area
On the Ground
Terrain
Vegetation
Access
Camping and Lodging
Historical Temperatures
High
Low
High
Low
Made up of desert lowlands, arid hills, and low mountains west of Beaver and Parowan, this unit has good numbers of mule deer. Physical conditioning will be important for hunting the rougher portions of the unit.
This unit varies from desert lowlands to rolling foothills with a couple of mountain ranges that lie between 6,500 and 8,000 feet above sea level. A few flat farm fields are on the western and eastern boundaries. Some parts of the mountains ranges are steep and rocky.
Low sagebrush and desert grasses cover most of the desert, while sagebrush, junipers, and pinyon pines cover some foothills and flats. The mountains have some patches of aspens and conifers, but most of the mountains have junipers, sagebrush, and pinyons. There’s a lot of bitterbrush, serviceberries, and chokecherries in various places throughout the unit. Farm fields are typically planted with alfalfa hay.
Hunters can access almost all of this unit by driving on gravel or dirt roads on BLM land. Black Rock Road on the north forks into several good interior gravel and dirt roads that branch into a network of public roads. Roads also climb around Minersville Reservoir in the south. Private land where hunters need permission to hunt include alfalfa fields near Beaver along the Indian Creek drainage, fields near Manderfield, Minersville Reservoir and Sulphurdale. Some landowners have been known to grant permission to hunt.
Roughly 988 square miles
74% public land
Elevations from 5,000-9,582 feet
Some hunters camp along dirt roads. West of the Sulpherdale exit is another common place for camping. Beaver County also operates a campground at Minersville Reservoir. Motel lodging and other supplies are available in Beaver and Minersville.