Nice! Where you going and with who?I've got my Elk and Mountain Goat booked so far.
Next I need to sort out what's in store for 2026.
I'd argue that many guided hunts are and should be in the attainable realm of the average man.
I may not be able to drop $50,000-$100,000 on a hunt but $10,000-$20,000 is doable for many of us.
Duly noted, but in all fairness you were in it for a relatively short time. The outfitters that have been at it for a few decades are making good coin when moose and the cheap sheep is at $40k US.I know a few western and northern premier species outfitters who make a comfortable living. None are rich by outfitting unless they were born into a big territory and operation, in other words it takes generations. And even most of the second or even third generation guys just make a comfortable blue collar living as well, and don’t make money until they leave the business and sell their territory.
My territory and gear was most of a million, much of it mortgaged against my home. The annual operating costs running a floatplane and ocean boat, jet boat, and guide staff… then insuring it all… would make your eyes water. Then the guide staff wages. Then food and drink, insurance, trade show travel to market. And then you spread your territory mortgage payment and all those expenses over just an effectively 60 day prime season, with spring bear and fishing to keep the wheels turning but not move the needle much. Before you know it you have to sell 25-50k all up hunts. And the clientele are there to book them, so why would the outfitter risk their livelihood charging less than sustainable rates.
It seems a pervasive attitude from some folks, the prices must be gouging. That just shows a disconnect in understanding. The rates are quite simply the cost of something incredibly expensive to provide and offer, with incredibly high demand for limited tags. Canada, in particular the Yukon, NWT, and BC has the best marquee game (mountain) hunting in the world when all is considered for game and political climate. That means there’s competition for the tags on the buyer’s end, the territory sales, and the tags. It all adds up to an expensive pursuit.
Hope that adds some clarity.
Duly noted Angus, but in all fairness you were in it for a relatively short time. The outfitters that have been at it for a few decades are making good coin when moose and the cheap sheep is at $40k US.
Right, but you missed my point. It's like the poor grain farmer that bought $4m worth of new equipment.It's not so bad that someone makes money. Especially if they are business people that had to work very hard for the first few years (or decade) to get into a position where they are making a profit and not just buying themselves a cool job.
Ontario is rife with it, poor supply management farmers, multimillion dollar “stick” barn yet the quota value dwarfs it.Right, but you missed my point. It's like the poor grain farmer that bought $4m worth of new equipment.
Yessir. If you call an Ontario resort for cabin availability,the minute you tell them you're a resident hunter,they're suddenly "booked up".Ontario is rife with it, poor supply management farmers, multimillion dollar “stick” barn yet the quota value dwarfs it.
How did they "buy" them? It's a very serious offense that could cost an outfitter their license and hunters all their gear plus thousands in fines.Tags are still relatively affordable in Ontario, know a few guys that bought them because the points system is retarded for moose.
Duly noted Angus, but in all fairness you were in it for a relatively short time. The outfitters that have been at it for a few decades are making good coin when moose and the cheap sheep is at $40k US.
During covid they were allowed to, was only a couple grand per guy.Yessir. If you call an Ontario resort for cabin availability,the minute you tell them you're a resident hunter,they're suddenly "booked up".
How did they "buy" them? It's a very serious offense that could cost an outfitter their license and hunters all their gear plus thousands in fines.
Or alternately; he needed to buy 4 million dollars worth of equipment with no guarantee of prices or even getting a crop. Farmers are doing well right now; but it wasn’t/isn’t always like that. I hope they kick ass so I can raise my rentsRight, but you missed my point. It's like the poor grain farmer that bought $4m worth of new equipment.
Although it didn't end up working out in the end I can attest to this statement, most likely the best offer for a guided hunt I will ever get in my lifetime .This question
Fair, seven years as outfitter, it was certainly enough to know how it works. It is a different business out west, the territories are often over a million of acres of very rugged ground and as in my case no road access. Having to own the territories and the equipment be they twenty horses, or floatplanes & boats, it’s just a different game.
Your fixed annual costs to operate a mountain outfit in BC are way into six figures, and you have to recoup that and earn your living and your guides in a 60 day season on limited allocated tags. When there’s a line up of people who want to shoot those tags, there’s no way you’re going to risk a loss.
I helped many residents get their animals, on rates a quarter of what using one of my allocated tags cost. Somebody posted a US guide as a comparable that was offering that service, bring your own tag, and that can be very affordable. You just can’t give away the allocations to people you don’t know just to be nice.
Now I’ve said it before, I’d likely do black bears and fishing local to home if I did it again. Though I’d certainly never give back the years flying the bushplane in the mountains or running the boats in the ocean and rivers chasing coastal bears and mountain goats. But they were hard and very expensive to offer, and as such so were the hunts.
These conversations always gravitate to the high demand species, the stuff that goes on magazine covers. That’s much more thirst for that than tags and quota can quench, and they can’t be given away. A mountains and what live in them seize the imagination, a hunt in them is a much different deal.