How many miles did you walk on your sheep/goat hunt?

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Mar 20, 2022
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Question for those who have done a sheep or mtn goat hunt and tracked it: How many miles over how many days did you put on the ground?
 
AK Goat: Few miles over a couple of days before finding and killing my goat
AK Sheep: 139 miles over 13 days before finding and killing a legal ram
 
Less than one mile, but it was on a private ranch and overall a disappointing experience despite being "successful".
 
19 miles, 2 days Muskwa range BC
30+ miles horseback round trip, 2-3 miles on foot WY unit 5 (3 days)
6 or so miles UT 2 days
 
I second the guy who said its more about elevation gain and loss. Also miles walked up and down differ from the way the crow flies. I have two Dall hunts each at 10 days under my belt done with no horses and just me and the guide. I'm going to British Columbia this year to hunt Stone for 14 days. As the crow flies on the first hunt I did 70 miles over ten days according to Garmin tracker but it felt like a Whole lot more and probably was. We were moving everyday all day and thru nasty stuff. I'm not trying to question any of the above numbers but I cannot imagine what 14 miles a day thru similar terrain would look like. You'd have to be built like King Kong. The 70 over ten was still brutal on the legs. I'm a flat lander because of where I live but I've done more miles in the lower 48 both in the Rockies and Appalachian per day that we're not close to the stress of what I went thru on either sheep hunt. What i learned between my first hunt and my second sheep hunt was that it wasn't the cardio I needed to work on, it was strength building of my lower body. Squats, leg presses, stair master with weighted vest, all those things made a huge difference in improving my performance between hunts.
 
My average is about 35-40 miles for dall sheep hunts, a couple bighorn hunts were in the same ball park. Most hunts are 8-10 days total, with a break day, or packing day or two. The shortest was about ~10 miles, most was around 90 miles and half of that was walking in/out. We spend a lot more time sitting and glassing than walking. Some days we hike 10 miles, other days we hike 1. Just depends. The one thing I'm less and less prepared for is packing an entire sheep and gear off the mountain. The walking is the easy part.
 
The last dall sheep I shot…….parked my truck at the Crystalline Hills on the road to McCarthy. Spent most of the day hiking up. Killed one, boned it out, and made it back to the truck by midnight.
That was in the early 90’s. Not sure if the area is still open or not. Guessing I walked maybe 3 miles
 
My first stone hunt was 123ish miles over 13 days.
Second was less than 50 but alot steeper
Desert was 42 miles in 7 days
 
I’ve been on two sheep hunts, both in Alaska.

The first was a TMA hunt and we walked about 15 miles. Tons of elevation gain/loss though.

The second was south of the TMA area and we did way more walking as it was incredibly crowded. We did about 60 miles on that hunt and gained/lost several thousand feet of elevation.
 
I hunted bighorn rams in several of Montana's Unlimited ram tag units for 10 or so years. When I started hunting them the resident tags were $25 and you could buy an Unlimited tag if you weren't successful in the limited drawings. Back then I didn't know how good a deal that was and I only a few days at the season opening.

The first year that I bought an Unlimited tag I backpacked several miles into the Absaroka Wilderness and set up my spike camp, then hunted several miles a day from there. By the 3rd morning I hadn't seen any sheep, but shortly after I left my camp I heard a bull elk coming toward me, bugaling. The early elk season in that Wilderness was open, and after I saw his dark, white antlers walking toward me, my sheep hunt ended with a 330" bull elk. Maybe 15 miles for no sheep.

My first bighorn ram was in another Unlimited Unit, and I hunted late in the season. The first day I walked several miles without seeing any sheep. The second morning I spotted a legal ram a mile or so from the road, so I put a stalk on him, packed half of him out, then made a second trip in for the rest of him. Maybe 8 total hiking miles for that trip.
UE2F1aZl.jpg


For my second bighorn ram, a friend and I used our horses to pack a camp into the Wilderness in a different Unlimited tag unit. Opening morning we left camp in different directions and I found a ram a couple of miles from camp. I used my horses to pack him down to camp and out, so probably walked 7 or 8 miles on that hunt.
GIs2cU8l.jpg


Two years later, I used my horses to pack a camp into a different mountain range in the Unlimited unit that Ihad killed the above ram in. Opening morning I legal ram that I had passed on the year before on the backside of the mountain above my camp. I was able to get my horses within about 1/ 4 from him to pack him out. I probably only hiked about 4 miles on that hunt.
WgGp4MYl.jpg


I did other Unlimited unit ram hunts using my horses to put in camps, but without coming home with a ram, and probably hiked 8-10 miles on each of those hunts.

For my first mountain goat hunt, I drew a tag in Montana's Pintler Wilderness. I waited to the later part of the season so the goats would have their winter hair. I slept in my truck near the wilderness boundary, The first day I climbed over the mountain above where I had parked. The snow on top was thigh deep. A quarter mile down the other side, I spooked a billy, but couldn't get a shot. Climbing back to the top it was so steep and the snow was so deep that I would climb 10 steps, then rest for 10 breaths all the way to the top. The next morning there was another foot of snow on my truck, so I gave went home, thinking that I would come back later. The snow just got deeper throughout the rest of the season.

A few years later, I drew another goat tag in the same unit that I had my 3rd Bighorn ram in, but several years before I had shot that ram. In September I made several trips into that area with my horses scouting for goats and with an Unlimited ram tag in my pocket, but leaving my goat tag at home so I wouldn't be tempted to shoot a billy before he grew his winter hair.

By mid November of that year I figured that the goats would have their winter hair, so a friend and I set his tent camper up in a campground near where I wanted to hunt for my goat. It was 15* F when we left camp. My friend had a cow elk permit, so he went up one valley to look for an elk and I drove to where I could glass for goats.

I spotted a lone billy about a mile above the road, so started climbing up to him. Earlier when there wasn't any snow it had taken me about an hour to climb up to the top. That day there was knee deep snow and it took me 3 hours to make the climb. So I only walked about 2 miles the day that I shot my goat.
k9AypEpl.jpg


In 1999 I booked a Dall sheep hunt in the MacKenzie Mountains in Canada's Northwest Territory. We took a float plane into Base Camp, then a Piper Cub to a point where we would backpack a couple of miles to a spike camp. The first morning from sike camp my guide and I hiked a mile or two over and around a mountain to where we spotted 5 rams. I immediately saw the ram that I wanted, and we snuck to within 206 yards from him where a 117 gr Sierra GameKing bullet from my .257 Ackley dropped him.
6Wkui3Xl.jpg


The next day we packed my ram and our sike camp down to where the Super Cub would pick us up, and on the way down we met a Wolverine coming up the valley. Along with my sheep tag, I had also bought tags for a mountain caribou, a wolf, and a wolverine. My total hiking for that ram was about 6 miles, with a wolverine as a bonus.
iYV4nUQl.jpg
 
I hunted bighorn rams in several of Montana's Unlimited ram tag units for 10 or so years. When I started hunting them the resident tags were $25 and you could buy an Unlimited tag if you weren't successful in the limited drawings. Back then I didn't know how good a deal that was and I only a few days at the season opening.

The first year that I bought an Unlimited tag I backpacked several miles into the Absaroka Wilderness and set up my spike camp, then hunted several miles a day from there. By the 3rd morning I hadn't seen any sheep, but shortly after I left my camp I heard a bull elk coming toward me, bugaling. The early elk season in that Wilderness was open, and after I saw his dark, white antlers walking toward me, my sheep hunt ended with a 330" bull elk. Maybe 15 miles for no sheep.

My first bighorn ram was in another Unlimited Unit, and I hunted late in the season. The first day I walked several miles without seeing any sheep. The second morning I spotted a legal ram a mile or so from the road, so I put a stalk on him, packed half of him out, then made a second trip in for the rest of him. Maybe 8 total hiking miles for that trip.
UE2F1aZl.jpg


For my second bighorn ram, a friend and I used our horses to pack a camp into the Wilderness in a different Unlimited tag unit. Opening morning we left camp in different directions and I found a ram a couple of miles from camp. I used my horses to pack him down to camp and out, so probably walked 7 or 8 miles on that hunt.
GIs2cU8l.jpg


Two years later, I used my horses to pack a camp into a different mountain range in the Unlimited unit that Ihad killed the above ram in. Opening morning I legal ram that I had passed on the year before on the backside of the mountain above my camp. I was able to get my horses within about 1/ 4 from him to pack him out. I probably only hiked about 4 miles on that hunt.
WgGp4MYl.jpg


I did other Unlimited unit ram hunts using my horses to put in camps, but without coming home with a ram, and probably hiked 8-10 miles on each of those hunts.

For my first mountain goat hunt, I drew a tag in Montana's Pintler Wilderness. I waited to the later part of the season so the goats would have their winter hair. I slept in my truck near the wilderness boundary, The first day I climbed over the mountain above where I had parked. The snow on top was thigh deep. A quarter mile down the other side, I spooked a billy, but couldn't get a shot. Climbing back to the top it was so steep and the snow was so deep that I would climb 10 steps, then rest for 10 breaths all the way to the top. The next morning there was another foot of snow on my truck, so I gave went home, thinking that I would come back later. The snow just got deeper throughout the rest of the season.

A few years later, I drew another goat tag in the same unit that I had my 3rd Bighorn ram in, but several years before I had shot that ram. In September I made several trips into that area with my horses scouting for goats and with an Unlimited ram tag in my pocket, but leaving my goat tag at home so I wouldn't be tempted to shoot a billy before he grew his winter hair.

By mid November of that year I figured that the goats would have their winter hair, so a friend and I set his tent camper up in a campground near where I wanted to hunt for my goat. It was 15* F when we left camp. My friend had a cow elk permit, so he went up one valley to look for an elk and I drove to where I could glass for goats.

I spotted a lone billy about a mile above the road, so started climbing up to him. Earlier when there wasn't any snow it had taken me about an hour to climb up to the top. That day there was knee deep snow and it took me 3 hours to make the climb. So I only walked about 2 miles the day that I shot my goat.
k9AypEpl.jpg


In 1999 I booked a Dall sheep hunt in the MacKenzie Mountains in Canada's Northwest Territory. We took a float plane into Base Camp, then a Piper Cub to a point where we would backpack a couple of miles to a spike camp. The first morning from sike camp my guide and I hiked a mile or two over and around a mountain to where we spotted 5 rams. I immediately saw the ram that I wanted, and we snuck to within 206 yards from him where a 117 gr Sierra GameKing bullet from my .257 Ackley dropped him.
6Wkui3Xl.jpg


The next day we packed my ram and our sike camp down to where the Super Cub would pick us up, and on the way down we met a Wolverine coming up the valley. Along with my sheep tag, I had also bought tags for a mountain caribou, a wolf, and a wolverine. My total hiking for that ram was about 6 miles, with a wolverine as a bonus.
iYV4nUQl.jpg
This is a life well-lived! Screw Gore-Tex.
 
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