Preety dismal for sureEven more reason to stop putting in? $220 for a 1 in 900 odds is pretty terrible even for sheep.
Preety dismal for sureEven more reason to stop putting in? $220 for a 1 in 900 odds is pretty terrible even for sheep.
I’ve been putting in for a unit that issues random tags but has enough sheep outside the wilderness. I won’t say the unit number but a smart person could figure out the unit.
According to a note I left myself last year...
Assuming status quo for tag allocation and applicants:
As of 2018 I would draw a tag in 130 years.
As of 2019 I would draw a tag in 109 years.
It looks as though there were some applicants ahead of me that dropped-out in 2019. My numbers could be wrong, I'll check them again when I have more time.
The only way it makes sense for me to continue to buy the $150 preference point is if I plan to move to Wyoming. At this point, I can't rule that out, so I continue to donate $150 to the state.
Awesome, good luck on completing your slam! I chatted with two Grand Slam guys coming home from Sheep Show this year. They both started the same place I am today, mid-30s, no sheep. I'm just hoping to get one. And maybe that will lead to dreaming about a second...But if (like me) you need a Rocky to complete your slam, it’s one of the few chances available to hunt them. So I’m in for the chance. I’ve drawn tags with longer odds before.....
I didn't think about if I ever move to Wyoming. Do your preference points transfer?According to a note I left myself last year...
Assuming status quo for tag allocation and applicants:
As of 2018 I would draw a tag in 130 years.
As of 2019 I would draw a tag in 109 years.
It looks as though there were some applicants ahead of me that dropped-out in 2019. My numbers could be wrong, I'll check them again when I have more time.
The only way it makes sense for me to continue to buy the $150 preference point is if I plan to move to Wyoming. At this point, I can't rule that out, so I continue to donate $150 to the state.
Yea the more I've thought about it, throwing in the towel at age 35 with 9-10 points seems like a short sided decision. I called and confirmed that points do transfer if (or more like when) I become a resident and then I will have a much better chance at drawing a tag in the resident pool. Thanks for the thought out response. I don't think I'll ever be able to afford a guided sheep hunt so I'll probably keep going in the unit that I can hunt on my own outside the wilderness or eventually have more units to be able to apply in if I become a resident. Now to hope a bunch of people drop out that are in front of me LOL.I jumped into the sheep drawings in 1998-99 applying outside my home state of Montana. I have 39 years applying for sheep, moose and goat in Montana, I've drawn goat and moose but still no sheep. I continue to apply even though I know my odds are dismal for all 3 as a NR, but someone draws every year.
My recommendation would be to stay the course. I mean yeah, guys like jims will tell you its a "waste" of $6000 to continue to apply. I agree to an extent. But, if you want to hunt sheep the options are pretty darn thin. You aren't going to even sniff a sheep hunt for $6000 buying one, wont happen. In particular if you're looking at this long term. Sheep hunts are getting nothing but more and more expensive as time goes on and the questions you have to ask are:
1. Am I willing to spend 20-70K plus for a sheep hunt to just buy one.
2. Is it that important that I am willing to spend $150 a year and potentially not draw.
3. Are sheep permits going to increase in number or decrease in number.
4. Will I be in good enough physical shape to hunt real late in life.
5. Will I eve be in a financial situation to just pay for hunts.
6. Is it worth sacrificing drawing other things to afford to apply for sheep.
Probably a bunch of others.
My thought was, that at the time for me, it wasn't too difficult or expensive to just buy a dall sheep. I shot a record book ram in 1995 and paid $4750 for the hunt.
I also knew at that time I wasn't going to just pay for deserts or bighorns, they were already out of my reach. So, I just started applying everywhere a tag was available to a NR...odds or not, I wanted to, and still do, want to hunt as many sheep tags as I can draw.
IMO, I think with the amount of money being thrown at sheep, and the work being done by WSF, RBHS, etc. that the future may be pretty bright for bighorns. I think as we learn more, get better control of the problems with disease, etc. there will be MORE tags available in the future.
I know this, if I were a guy 30 years old, I would look at this as a glass half full situation and that it will improve. I would not look at my $150 a year application fee the same as "burning it for heat being a better choice" but rather an investment into the future of wildlife, hunting, and doing more and better things for wild sheep.
I think things may get better, more tags may become available, and I also think many people are just not willing to stay the course. Lots of Insta-famous folks apply for a while then burn out and quit when they realize its not a short term commitment.
Your choice, but the only way this average guy was ever going to get to hunt deserts and rocky mountain bighorns was staying the course and drawing.
I've drawn both in the last 7 years, desert as a NR in Arizona and Rocky in Wyoming as a Resident.
If you ask me was it worth the money, time and effort to apply? Yeah, I think it was...
YMMV.
I would stay. I have no idea, but how many nr's start applying before they're 25? With some good life choices and luck you can literally outlast the majority of the point holders in front of you. Very long term strategy, but given the current system it's viable.
Sent from my SM-G975U using Tapatalk
Yes. You are throwing it away. Save it and go hunt tahr in NZ in a few years, or mid-Asain ibex. You won't catch up and they will keep raising prices. I am 35...I started when it was $7 a point. Got out shortly thereafter as it kept raising like 100x worse than inflation.