Unit 207
High-desert basin country spanning sagebrush flats to sparse timbered ridges south of Mina.
Hunter's Brief
Unit 207 stretches across Mineral County's remote southern basin—a mix of open sagebrush flats punctuated by scattered mountain ranges and dry washes. Elevations climb from low desert valleys to moderate peaks like the Pilot Mountains and Cedar Range. Limited road access keeps pressure down, but water is scarce and navigation demands careful planning. The terrain's size and complexity reward methodical hunters willing to glass open country and work drainages systematically.
- 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
The Pilot Mountains and Cedar Mountains anchor the unit's major terrain breaks, offering vantage points for glassing expansive basins. Pilot Peak and surrounding summits provide reliable navigation landmarks visible across miles of open country. Named washes—Petrified, Antone, and Omco—follow natural travel corridors and drainage systems connecting basins.
Several named springs including Buffington, Stone Cabin, and Cedar Springs provide critical water reference points in this limited-water environment, though reliability varies seasonally.
Elevation & Habitat
Terrain spans from low desert flats around 4,300 feet to peaks exceeding 9,000 feet, creating distinct habitat zones. Lower elevations support sagebrush plains and sparse desert scrub, while mid-elevation slopes host scattered pinyon-juniper and mountain mahogany. Upper elevations transition to sparse conifer forest with mountain ranges like the Pilots and Cedars providing higher-country terrain.
The sparse forest badge reflects mostly open country with timber confined to ridge systems and northfacing slopes.
Access & Pressure
Over 235 miles of roads traverse the unit, but sparse road density and rough terrain limit vehicle access significantly. Most roads are primitive two-track requiring high-clearance vehicles; no paved highways cross the interior. This isolation keeps pressure manageable compared to more accessible units, but also means hunters must invest time reaching productive country.
Expect solitude but plan accordingly—mechanical issues become serious quickly, and cell service is nonexistent across most of the unit.
Boundaries & Context
Unit 207 occupies the southern portion of Mineral County, Nevada, bounded north by State Route 361 and west by U.S. Highway 95. The unit encompasses classic Great Basin topography—a sprawling landscape of basins, ranges, and intermittent drainages with few towns nearby. Mina serves as the primary supply hub to the north, while the unit extends deep into remote country characterized by minimal development. The vast size combined with limited access infrastructure creates an isolated hunting environment typical of Nevada's interior high desert.
Water & Drainages
Water scarcity defines hunting strategy in Unit 207. Named springs exist but are widely scattered and seasonal reliability is questionable—scouting water sources before the hunt is essential. Petrified Wash, Antone Wash, and Omco Wash represent the primary drainage systems but flow intermittently. Rhodes Salt Marsh marks another water feature, though salinity may limit utility.
Hunters must either plan camps near known springs or carry significant water; this constraint fundamentally shapes where hunting pressure concentrates and where animals move seasonally.
Hunting Strategy
Unit 207 holds elk, mule deer, pronghorn, desert bighorn sheep, mountain goat, moose, black bear, and mountain lion. Elk concentrate in higher timbered country during fall, moving to mid-elevation sagebrush slopes as snow deepens. Mule deer utilize the transition zones between sagebrush flats and juniper-covered ridges.
Pronghorn favor the open basins and plains. Bighorn sheep inhabit the Pilot and Cedar ranges, requiring steep-terrain hunting. Success requires water knowledge, glassing skills for open country, and willingness to cover distance on foot through complex terrain.
The high complexity score reflects both physical terrain and navigation demands.