I contacted Larry Bartlett a couple of weeks ago. He is booked through 2024.
'Preciate the responses. I talked to Mike a few days ago and he is now living outside of AK. He moved to support his wife through some health issues. Says he is still in the game and goes back to AK often. I plan on getting some references from him. Thought I'd throw the ask out here to see what kind of feedback other have. I'll be 59 in 2020 and feel the need to speed the learning curve up for this hunt. Not much time for mulligans.
Float hunting for moose is a lot of work, and I have talked to 2 different groups in the past 4 years who both ended up in the river when the raft (which handles WAY differently with a moose in it) hit a sweeper and they lost control and went in.
Damn good advice. ThanksYou're getting some great information sir...hang in there and don't give up!
Larry's points are absolutely accurate. I always appreciate his voice, and I enjoy listening to him provide objective data and reality based public comment at BOG/BLM advisory committee meetings. However, as I mentioned earlier, my greatest appreciation is for Larry's excellent products...and his support for fellow veterans. He is wrong on one thing though (said with humor), i.e., assuming that since you're 59, you have a conservative approach to life. I've got you by a couple years, and Larry knows the not so conservative places where my hunting partner and I have taken the wonderful PR-49HD's that we bought from him a few years back...and will be taking our new Korks in the fall.
Here's another factor for you to consider as you plan and research. Perhaps you've already done this, and my comment will simply serve to endorse and remind. Obtain (and maintain) a very clear sense (the core essence) of what this hunt means to you...what you seek, what you want to experience and savor in your memory after the hunt. We are all different in what we seek. Is it the adventure, is it the experience of hunting for moose, is it to take a monster, etc.? The pictures of the monster bulls that I have seen on this forum and elsewhere are amazing and super impressive...I truly mean that...and with respect and congratulations as well. If that's your goal, go for it...whatever your goal, go for it...but be mindful of your goal and plan your trip accordingly. I can say as a thirty year hunting Alaskan, who has had years of fortunate opportunities and adventures as well as taking home that wonderful moose meat countless times, that I've not yet taken a monster bull like some that I have seen posted...my biggest thus far is 57". I seek the adventure, the remote solitude, getting away from the world of people, being in the world of the animals that I am hunting, and bringing back moose meat. I have seen and passed on a couple true monsters because the circumstances of those specific situations were such that I just wasn't sure that I could get the meat out of the field without possible ill effects to it...I am SUPER conservative on that...my family and friends love the moose meat that I bring back because I am so careful (and admittedly obsessive) with it!
If you seek the adventure and experience of a remote Alaskan moose hunt, then the size of the bull is really not a factor...as long as it's legal! Take a look at the regulations about the harvest requirements because they do vary from unit to unit, e.g., for some units it's any bull, for others it's certain minimums for spread and/or brow tines. I do wish you the best, and I apologize for being long-winded this morning. I'll rest my comments now as you listen to the advice of others here.
Damn good advice. Thanks
However...the Alaska landscape (politically and land-rights related) is changing faster than Strahan (or I) will be able to manage from afar. If you book with him in the next 3-5 years I think you're good to go on specifics he can offer. But beyond that Alaska's access to public lands will become more challenging for hunters, causing a congestion or concentration on once remote options. This year alone I lost 5 spots to re-discovery and pressure. I'm having to get creative to call myself a Hunt Planner by managing revenue streams that have longer gevity if you know what I mean...