Unit 141
Green River
High-elevation wilderness sprawling across the Wind River Range with glaciers, alpine lakes, and steep mountain terrain.
Hunter's Brief
Unit 141 is serious high-country terrain in the Wind River Range, dominated by alpine and subalpine zones above 9,500 feet. The country is cut by deep drainages, glaciated peaks, and numerous mountain lakes. Access is limited to foot traffic and scattered pack trails once you leave the few rough roads. This is big, complex terrain—terrain complexity rates 9.2 out of 10—that rewards self-sufficiency and navigation skills. Mule deer and white-tailed deer hunt throughout, but success requires understanding the terrain and being willing to work.
- 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
Granite Lake, Green River Lakes, and Summit Lake anchor the major water destinations and navigation points. The glaciated peaks—Mammoth Glacier, Sourdough Glacier, and several others—dominate the skyline and serve as visual references. Granite Peak, Greeley Point, and White Point offer glassing vantage points.
The Green River, flowing through the center, provides the primary drainage corridor and travel reference. Aspen Ridge, Elk Ridge, and numerous passes (Vista Pass, Gunsight Pass, Green River Pass) mark key terrain divides that hunters use for route finding and understanding ridge systems.
Elevation & Habitat
The unit spans high-elevation country from 7,467 feet along river valleys to 13,832 feet at the highest peaks. The entire terrain sits above typical forest-prairie boundaries—most of the country exists in alpine and subalpine zones with scattered timber, open tundra-like terrain, and exposed ridges. Moderate forest cover appears in protected drainages and lower elevation pockets, but the dominant landscape is open high country with rock, grass, and wind-sculpted vegetation.
Transition zones between timber and alpine provide the most varied habitat.
Access & Pressure
The unit has approximately 273 miles of roads, but most are rough Forest Service tracks—major highways don't penetrate the interior. Access is fair by designation but realistically limited: most hunting occurs on foot or horseback from trailheads along Highway 191 and Forest Service roads. The high complexity and remote nature keep overall pressure moderate, but certain drainages and lakes see consistent use during prime seasons.
Self-sufficient hunters willing to pack deep into the range find solitude; casual access areas near trails and lakes draw more attention.
Boundaries & Context
Unit 141 occupies the high interior of the Wind River Range, bounded by U.S. Highway 191 to the west at Warren Bridge, the Hoback Rim and Gros Ventre divide to the south, the Continental Divide to the east, and the Green River drainage to the north. The unit wraps around the Green River Lakes country and extends into the heart of the range. This is vast, wilderness-character terrain with most public land, making it a serious backcountry proposition rather than a drive-and-walk hunt.
Water & Drainages
Water is moderate but distributed—the Green River provides reliable flow through the heart of the unit, with numerous alpine lakes scattered throughout including Granite Lake, Green River Lakes, Flagstone Lake, and Iceberg Lake. Springs are scattered (Fish Bowl Spring, Warm Spring, Kendall Warm Spring) but not abundant. Major creeks include Roaring Fork, Porcupine Creek, and Mud Creek.
Most water sources require bushwhacking or pack trails to reach. Early season reliability depends on snowmelt; late season may concentrate animals near permanent lakes and springs.
Hunting Strategy
Mule deer and white-tailed deer both use this terrain, with muleys dominating the open alpine and subalpine habitat while whitetails favor timbered drainages and transition zones. Early season hunting targets animals in high parks and open ridges before weather pushes them lower; expect deer at or near the highest elevations in August and early September. Rut hunting focuses on transition zones between timber and open country where deer concentrate.
Late season requires dropping into lower drainages as snow pushes animals into protected forest pockets. Glassing open ridges and parks is effective; hunting requires reading wind, understanding elevation migrations, and being prepared for rapid weather changes in alpine terrain.