Unit 125
BENT/CROWLEY/KIOWA/OTERO
Low-elevation plains and agricultural lands along the Arkansas River valley with scattered water features.
Hunter's Brief
GMU 125 spans the lower Arkansas River valley and surrounding plains country between La Junta and the Kansas border, dominated by agricultural land, irrigation infrastructure, and open terrain at modest elevations. Access is straightforward via Colorado 71, 96, 109, and US 50, with numerous county roads connecting communities and irrigation canals. Terrain is predominantly flat to rolling prairie with scattered water sources including Horse Creek Reservoir, several smaller lakes, and the Arkansas River itself. Hunting here requires understanding private land distribution and water availability during your planned season.
- Compact: under 200 sq mi
- Moderate: 200 - 800 sq mi
- Vast: over 800 sq mi
- Few: under 25%
- Some: 25 - 60%
- Most: over 60%
- Limited: under 0.7 mi/mi² (backcountry)
- Fair: 0.7 - 1.5 mi/mi²
- Connected: over 1.5 mi/mi² (well-roaded)
- Flat: under 20% mountains
- Rolling: 20 - 55%
- Steep: over 55%
- Sparse: under 20%
- Moderate: 20 - 50%
- Dense: over 50%
- Limited: under 0.3% area
- Moderate: 0.3 - 2% area
- Abundant: over 2% area
Terrain Deep Dive
Landmarks & Navigation
Horse Creek Reservoir and Lake Meredith Reservoir serve as notable water and navigation landmarks, visible features in the otherwise open terrain. Taylor Lake and Cheraw Lake provide additional reference points. The Arkansas River itself forms a major geographic anchor for the unit's southern boundary and is recognizable for its riparian corridor.
Meredith Hill offers modest elevation gain for glassing the surrounding plains. Rocky Ford, Sugar City, and La Junta serve as populated reference points. The network of irrigation canals—Fort Lyon Storage Canal, Lewis Lateral, Rocky Ford Canal—traces across the landscape and indicates water availability and agricultural development patterns.
Elevation & Habitat
This unit sits entirely in low-elevation plains terrain, well below timberline and mountain forest zones. The landscape is predominantly open prairie and agricultural fields with sparse woody vegetation scattered along watercourses and draws. Short grasses, irrigated cropland, and occasional cottonwood groves define the vegetation.
The Arkansas River corridor provides the primary riparian habitat, with Horse Creek and smaller draws supporting similar gallery forests. Forest cover is minimal—think open country broken by tree-lined waterways rather than timbered slopes. Elevation changes are subtle across the unit, with gradual undulations rather than distinct terrain breaks.
Access & Pressure
The unit is well-connected with 724 miles of roads providing straightforward access throughout. Major highways (US 50, Colorado 71, 96, 109) border or cross the unit, and county roads penetrate the interior. Nearby towns including La Junta, Rocky Ford, and smaller communities mean consistent hunter pressure during seasons.
Access is not a limiting factor here—the challenge lies in distinguishing public from private land and managing crowds. The flat, open terrain makes navigation simple but offers limited privacy. Early-season and off-peak hunting likely encounters less competition than traditional rifle seasons.
Boundaries & Context
GMU 125 occupies the lower Arkansas River valley across portions of Crowley, Kiowa, Bent, and Otero counties in southeastern Colorado. The unit stretches from Colorado 96 on the north to the Arkansas River on the south, bounded west by Colorado 71 and east by county roads near the Kiowa-Bent county line. La Junta serves as the primary reference point and nearest town with services.
The landscape is defined by the river valley and surrounding agricultural plains, with elevations between roughly 3,800 and 4,600 feet. This is prairie country with human development—towns, ranches, and irrigation systems are integral to the landscape.
Water & Drainages
Water availability is moderate but concentrated. Horse Creek Reservoir and Lake Meredith Reservoir are reliable water sources. The Arkansas River flows through the unit's southern portion and provides consistent water.
Secondary drainages including Horse Creek, Adobe Creek, Bob Creek, and Timpas Creek offer water during wetter periods. Numerous irrigation canals and ditches crisscross the unit, reflecting agricultural dependence on irrigation. Spring and early season water may be more limited than summer when irrigation systems are active.
Understanding canal access and reservoir conditions will influence where and when you can effectively hunt.
Hunting Strategy
GMU 125 historically holds elk, deer, pronghorn, moose, bear, and mountain lions, though terrain and landscape suggest focus on mule and white-tailed deer and pronghorn. The Arkansas River corridor and riparian draws support cervids, particularly during water stress periods. Pronghorn occupy the open plains.
Water sources—reservoirs, creek corridors, and irrigated areas—concentrate game, especially during dry stretches. Hunting strategy centers on waterhole glassing and draw-bottoming in the riparian zone. Early and late season offer better conditions when heat stress drives animals to water.
Terrain simplicity favors optics and glassing over stalking. Scout access carefully due to private land distribution; focus on public sections near reservoirs and river bottomlands.