Best Province for a Hunter

Saskatchewan has the best quality of whitetail, mule deer and migratory/upland bird hunting, followed by Alberta. For quality of life, Saskatchewan and Alberta is less costly than British Columbia. Manitoba, no comment.

Hey, that... ok you’re right. :(
 
P.S. - Manitoba has low real estate prices, stable enconomy (never really balloons, never really flops), good black bear hunting with 2 seasons, And it had become the hub for air transport throughout the entirety of North America (Both US & Canada) which has lateral business activity and opportunity.

Of course, we also have horrible brutal cold in the winter, horribly hot humid mosquito riddled summers, nearly no opportunity to hunt moose or elk, low whitetail numbers, no mule deer hunting....

On second thought, don’t bother with Manitoba if you’re interested in hunting something other than cans, paper, or pumpkins.
 
A co-worker always said the when he retired he was headed to Saskatchewan.
He had no ties at all other than a brother in ON and he was the type of guy that when he made a decision there was no stopping him.
I have not heard or seen him since he retired not sure if he made it there or not.

David
 
The Yukon has many species to hunt;
Moose,
Mountain Goat,
Stone Sheep,
Dall Sheep,
Fannin Sheep,
Barren Ground Caribou,
Mountain Caribou,
Grizzly Bear,
Black Bear,
Wolf,
Wolverine,
and Wood Bison.

Elk, Mule Deer, Muskox, Polar Bear and Cougar can be found in limited numbers within the Yukon. These species are not open for non-resident hunting.
And we have to make time to do some fishing!
 
You guys dont wanna come to BC to many man buns and way to much rain.
September 1st to August 31 st is the Rust Festival and never mind that guy from Ashcroft either he is a little water logged with all that flooding going on ;)
Can hardly ever see the front of your ocular lens it rains so much unless of course you have a gun bearer hold your umbrella over top of you whilst preparing to shoot.
Rob
Rob

Man, you gotta get out into the interior. Far fewer man buns and basically no rain.
 
The Yukon has many species to hunt;
Moose,
Mountain Goat,
Stone Sheep,
Dall Sheep,
Fannin Sheep,
Barren Ground Caribou,
Mountain Caribou,
Grizzly Bear,
Black Bear,
Wolf,
Wolverine,
and Wood Bison.

Elk, Mule Deer, Muskox, Polar Bear and Cougar can be found in limited numbers within the Yukon. These species are not open for non-resident hunting.
And we have to make time to do some fishing!

Nice place to visit, but the cost of non-resident licences is a cheap price to pay for skipping on the winter crap weather. I spent 20 years living on the wrong side of the Rockies, and if I never see another Prairie winter, I'd be pretty happy about it.

I have hunted BC, Alberta, and Saskatchewan as a resident over the years. Ignoring the political issues, BC has by far the widest range of choices, hunting and fishing.
I would choose Alberta as close second, then Saskatchewan.

Sk had it all over if you are a Migratory Bird hunter.
 
What ??? No Québec ?

I’m disappointed. I thought it was the place to be. Doesn’t everyone want to be surrounded by tree hugging separatists ?

After all, hunting and trees go hand in hand. No ??

Lololololololololo
 
Yeah...the mountain goat and sheep hunting there are without peer.

BC probably has the most game species closely followed by Alberta. It's probably a chop pot between the two but BC has the edge on sheep with 4 species though they lack pronghorns.


Yeah, but we have man buns....
To many for my liking, but I digress.
Remember the Rust Festival...
Rob
 
Cost of living is somewhat more reasonable outside of the lower mainland and okanagan also. But we’ll see what happens to our gas prices now that the granola munchers down south have started a fight with the neighbors......
 
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