Dall sheep doable for under 25k ?

IBen

WKR
Joined
May 15, 2021
Messages
388
There are a handful of outfitters that still have quality hunts in that price range. You just won’t find them advertising in magazines or at shows, or they don’t even have websites because they have very small businesses, guide their own hunts, keep to themselves, and stay booked up via word of mouth. They also have far better success rates than many outfitters that have prices $10-20K higher that you see in every search(in AK that is).
This is correct.
also you can hunt grizzly or caribou along side sheep. Bring a grizzly locking tag with harvest tickets for sheep and caribou.
 

Rowndy

FNG
Joined
Oct 22, 2012
Messages
42
Can you please point me to this population data that incorrect? There is 50% fewer sheep in Alaska today than there was 15 years ago. Wer'e killing half as many sheep as we did 15 years ago, and the trend isn't going to change anytime soon.
I never said anything about incorrect population data.
 

S-3 ranch

WKR
Joined
Jan 18, 2022
Messages
1,195
Location
Texas / Hillcounrty
I don’t think it’s possible with Alaska having such huge problems with their population and Canada having to absorb all the pressure
I really wanted to make a run on a slam, but with a stone sheep being a impossible task now days, especially for anything with 10-14 rings ( mature ram)
It’s now easier to get multiple desert bighorn and bighorn then a single stone,
And I wouldn’t trust a single sheep operator in Alaska now for a Dall
Might be a wild goose chase
 

wind gypsy

"DADDY"
Joined
Dec 30, 2014
Messages
10,012
I don’t think it’s possible with Alaska having such huge problems with their population and Canada having to absorb all the pressure
I really wanted to make a run on a slam, but with a stone sheep being a impossible task now days, especially for anything with 10-14 rings ( mature ram)
It’s now easier to get multiple desert bighorn and bighorn then a single stone,
And I wouldn’t trust a single sheep operator in Alaska now for a Dall
Might be a wild goose chase

Not sure what a sheep operator is but if you're saying not a single AK sheep outfitter is worth trusting that's a pretty strong statement.
 
Joined
Jun 16, 2015
Messages
37
The list price for the hunt might be in the ballpark of $25,000, relatively speaking, here is a guy advertising a hunt for $28,000- https://www.mikeodin.com/dall-sheep-hunts.html

Its all the other costs, as mentioned earlier that really add up, one of the big ones is getting a bush plane, which is something like $4,000, or more, for the flight to sheep camp and back. Don't forget the cost of the tags, flights to Alaska, extra baggage charges (bringing meat and horns home), hotel stay while in Fairbanks or Anchorage, and tipping is typically 10% of the cost of the hunt ($2,500-$3,000). This is not exhaustive.

Depending on your living situation, you could just move for a few years, scratch the itch and be done....Not everyone has that luxury, I get it.
 

FAAFO

WKR
Joined
May 24, 2024
Messages
482
Outfitter
Yep truth hurts, but most want a decent amount of money for a deposit that is now none interest bearing and none refundable
Requiring a deposit is normal. Even Texass outfitters….er operators require one. I’ve yet to see an alaska outfitters that doesn’t have a reasonable refund policy if you decide to back out.
 

TommyDom

FNG
Classified Approved
Joined
Jul 13, 2021
Messages
6
Location
North Dakota
I just hunted AK on 08/19/24. I booked officially on 12/17/2021. So that means I had to book 2.7 years in advance and I think I was the last person to book for 2024. I had lost a close hunting buddy to suicide and buried my mom after a fight with cancer. The lockdown just pissed me off. I just didn't care about the cost. I was in a state where I knew life is so short and it can be your time at anytime (I had also got charged by a Grizzly on my BC Mountain Goat hunt and completely destroyed by right hand and needed surgery, oh and I almost died of a brain tumor years back). Beyond all that, this was something I had dreamt of my entire life. There was no internet when I was a kid. I would cut out images from the Cabelas magazine of hunters with sheep and pin them to my wall. I just never thought I would ever be able to harvest a sheep. I just decided I would made it work financially. Most of us hunters are salt of the earth people and just don't have this kind of money, but I found a way. It was the most glorious experience ever and I harvested a behemoth of a sheep. I was told that my same hunt is $12,000 more now than when I booked it. I track my expenses very closely and I tacked on another $7,000 for tag/license, tip, flight, hotel, rental car, etc. I am not even including gear that you may need. I bought a ton of gear from my 2021 Colorado Sheep hunt. I just don't think prices will go down. If you want to do it, find a way sooner than later....or apply for raffles and pray.
 

Mojave

WKR
Joined
Jun 13, 2019
Messages
2,480
If I had a profession where I could manage it, I would just move to the Yukon or NWT.

LIving in Alaska, would work if you could live in a village that had subsistence hunting for sheep in the unit.

Liv ing in Alaska and not having the money or time to get out and hunt. sheep every year would be a waste of living there.

I tend not to think in circles of any hunt being the thing I wrap around my life. Odds are pretty high these days to go home without a sheep. Happened a lot during the 2023 stone and Dall seasons in Canada and Alaska. I don't know how 2024 worked out.

If you are lucky you will live through hundreds or thousands of hunting scenarios. To define your life at 5-12 days one August doesn't interest me.

Should you blow $350,000 on a slam? Or $35,000 on a Dall hunt? Yes, if it does nothing to your financial bottom line.

I knew a guy that won $50,000 in the early 1990's and went to Tanzania and killed everything in the Masailand area. 15-20 species. Got divorced, lost his house, eventually lost his job and ended up in poverty. That $50,000 would have changed his life today.

Do as much as you can do, but!

Be careful with what you do.
 

FAAFO

WKR
Joined
May 24, 2024
Messages
482
If I had a profession where I could manage it, I would just move to the Yukon or NWT.

LIving in Alaska, would work if you could live in a village that had subsistence hunting for sheep in the unit.

Liv ing in Alaska and not having the money or time to get out and hunt. sheep every year would be a waste of living there.

I tend not to think in circles of any hunt being the thing I wrap around my life. Odds are pretty high these days to go home without a sheep. Happened a lot during the 2023 stone and Dall seasons in Canada and Alaska. I don't know how 2024 worked out.

If you are lucky you will live through hundreds or thousands of hunting scenarios. To define your life at 5-12 days one August doesn't interest me.

Should you blow $350,000 on a slam? Or $35,000 on a Dall hunt? Yes, if it does nothing to your financial bottom line.

I knew a guy that won $50,000 in the early 1990's and went to Tanzania and killed everything in the Masailand area. 15-20 species. Got divorced, lost his house, eventually lost his job and ended up in poverty. That $50,000 would have changed his life today.

Do as much as you can do, but!

Be careful with what you do.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
 
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