i may add that the worst tippers were the hosts of TV shows .
There is definitely no such thing as a free hunt......and most of them dont even pay for the hunt or the fishing
I have guided for the last 14 years and am interested in the responses on here. The average guide is paid between 150 to 225 per day on the hunting side (in MB). If you factor in the hours of work, the tip is the only way to make it reasonable. Guiding is not my main occupation but from those that do, leaving 50 per day would not endear you to them. The average is 15% of the total cost of the hunt and varies based on service. I have received 1000 for a single duck hunt from one guy (not anywhere near typical) and have been stiffed. View it this way.....if you went to a restaurant and racked up a 1 2 3 or 6000 bill, what would you expect to leave? Lastly ask if the tips are pooled or individual. In our case all tips go to the outfitter and we split amongst ourselves, he doesnt take anything,. And lastly tp reiterate, service does not equal killing animals or catching fish.....it means having your expectations exceeded.
I have guided for the last 14 years and am interested in the responses on here. The average guide is paid between 150 to 225 per day on the hunting side (in MB). If you factor in the hours of work, the tip is the only way to make it reasonable. Guiding is not my main occupation but from those that do, leaving 50 per day would not endear you to them. The average is 15% of the total cost of the hunt and varies based on service. I have received 1000 for a single duck hunt from one guy (not anywhere near typical) and have been stiffed. View it this way.....if you went to a restaurant and racked up a 1 2 3 or 6000 bill, what would you expect to leave? Lastly ask if the tips are pooled or individual. In our case all tips go to the outfitter and we split amongst ourselves, he doesnt take anything,. And lastly tp reiterate, service does not equal killing animals or catching fish.....it means having your expectations exceeded.
I've heard the same. In some ways I get it because the TV crews are there working as well, it's not a holiday for them...it's another day at work and no one is tipping them for each day but it's unfair too because while the outfitter gets all the exposure from the show and all the money from the bookings that come with it, to the guide it's just another hunter.
There is definitely no such thing as a free hunt......
I had figured on 50$ a day from each hunter that is being guided as a very reasonable amount.
My average day is 18 hrs. At my rate (which is generous) still puts me below minimum wage. So yes I think the tip is necessary. As for hearkillr, no a 6000 tip is unreasonable. ..drastically so. But from the moose guides I know in the province, a 6000 hunt normaly yields 1500. Approx 215 tip per day. I will again relate to a restaurant (where I have also worked), tips should be based on service but they have become a standard of practice. Ethically yourguide should work exceptionally hard for you, however knowing that lev3l of service correlates to level of renumeration is an incentive for anyone.