Pucky Freak
Well-known member
You can do a NR DIY elk hunt for $2000. If you save up over 24 months that’s $83/month. That’s financial discipline, not riches.Even a DIY hunt is becoming a wealthy mans game.
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You can do a NR DIY elk hunt for $2000. If you save up over 24 months that’s $83/month. That’s financial discipline, not riches.Even a DIY hunt is becoming a wealthy mans game.
Who to avoid is mostly what I’ve learned also.Doesn't sound like you learned much ... except who to avoid the next time. I see my African outfitter has a starter deal on now. Four animals over six days (four hunting) for $2,400: wildebeest [blue or black], blesbuck, springbok, impala. If a warthog showed up that would be a cheap extra (one landowner I know insists that you shoot them). That includes everything but $24/day tax. My first trip over I shot all but springbok before noon of the first morning + warthog. Springbok the following morning on a different property + very fine gemsbuck. You'll see hundreds of animals and dozens of different species. My first encounter on first property was a couple of decent impala rams. Well, I thought they were decent. PH says no way and owner says we should come back when we're done and cull them both. And we would have but our truck had all it could carry by then. Drive on around the corner and almost collide with a cow rino. My PH just sent me a photo of a leopard in the road of that property as he was leaving two weeks ago. Very cool! Flight to South Africa can be bagged for between a thousand and fifteen hundred round trip if you shop early. Finish your list early and there's always management culling available. My first trip I culled a cape buffalo for a song. A guided trip for dall sheep is over twenty grand and no guarantee one will be shot. Or seen! I'd love to shoot a sheep but if wall hangers are what's important then spend the same money (or less) and go to the dark continent. Personally, I go to see spectacular country and tons of animals. The lodge scene is fancy enough but eating a lot, getting gassed on expensive booze, and BSing around the fire with dudes in fresh bought safari duds isn't a big drawing card for me. This time I stayed mostly in the property owners' farm houses and that suited me just fine. Felt like I was part of the family. Indeed, my PH is like family now.
I have done DIY since around 2012’ish every year except 2021.You can do a NR DIY elk hunt for $2000. If you save up over 24 months that’s $83/month. That’s financial discipline, not riches.
Good post. It’s interesting I grew upWay I look at it.. I can do 5, 6, 7 diy hunts for the cost of one guided hunt. I'm going to learn a lot more going on my own every year than going just once with a guide.
I did do a semi-guided hunt about 10 years ago.. For pronghorn. To be honest, the whole thing felt kind of weird. Just not my thing, I guess. Soon after that I learned that a fella actually could buy a tag, drive to public land, and just hunt. That was just a foreign idea to me, even though I grew up hunting family and neighbors' land.
Maybe I've just been lucky, but I probably run around 75% on filling tags on my DIY hunts now. I won't say never, but at this time I just don't see myself doing it any other way.