Some people have sent me PM's on my experience with Northstar. Here is what I told them along with a few other thoughts based on some of the comments above.
Overall Hunt and experience: It was good. There were five of us that went in and we shot two bulls on the first afternoon. After that the next two days more bulls were saw but they were 5 plus miles from camp. The three guys with tags left chose not to venture back up the hill behind camp the second day and likely missed opportunities to shoot because we saw bulls from camp on the hill that afternoon. To far from camp to shoot or try and chase them. We did not shoot another bull over the next 7 days but did see a lot of cows and calfs. The bulls just seemed to vanish after the third day.
It seemed the majorly of the Caribou we saw were 4-5 miles from the river and if you have hunted the tundra you know that’s not ideal. The bulls we did shoot were 1.3 miles from the river/camp.
I don’t have anything negative to say about NorthStar and I’m likely going to book a costal black bear hunt with them. I do not know if I would do another airboat drop Caribou hunt again though.
Here are the two we got I'm the luckily one behind the bigger one.
We all had a great time just the hunting was tough.
Some follow up thoughts:
1. Yes we saw plenty of other hunters. You can also see 10-20 miles on a clear day with some elevation. We never had another hunter within a half mile of us, but the hunters that were that close were on the opposite side of the river and unless you have a raft you were not crossing the river where we got dropped off.
2. If you rent camp gear make damn sure they pack everything in the boat. We rented a full camp setup with cots and cots got mistakenly left in a truck bed. Needless to say they didn't get those to use until the second day. If it was not for us being half dead tired from hauling the two bulls back to came that night we might of noticed missing them.
3. One of our hunters luggage and gun didn't make it from Anchorage to Deadhorse. NorthStar went above and beyond the call and helped us here. Once the bags made it the following day they were able to pick them up and brought them in to us. They even took him around town to help get some supplies in the mean time.
4. Discussions around Fly-In hunts. This has great potential, but the honest truth is these services get hammered with weather delays and ultimately lead to people camping in a tent village for days waiting to get flown out (Reducing actual hunting days). The best part is that these folks are getting flown into areas were people are not...... Or so they say. If your getting flown West of the pipeline your likely good, going East off the rivers you will be camping in a better location (based on where we saw the most caribou 4-5 miles from the river) but you will not be completely away from other hunters.
5. Spike camp - Would be a good idea for what we experienced and actually watch another group of hunters setup one. It would take around 2-3 hours to get to the glassing spots until we found a much more stable ground path and that cut it to 1.5 Hours.