Hunting guide as a career ?

akcabin

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Feb 10, 2023
Messages
230
With guide concession areas, is it even possible to get the opportunity to be able to guide anywhere you want to ?
 

Beendare

WKR
Joined
May 6, 2014
Messages
9,193
Location
Corripe cervisiam
I owned a guide business and have helped buddies that are guides with their clients.

I almost lost my love for hunting …essentially it was a job- not fun.

Besides that, There is no money in it.

Get in a trade; electrical, welding, something like that and make some money
 

nam1975

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 5, 2018
Messages
166
1. Military. Do your initial stint and get out.
2. Skilled trades. Learn then Open your own small shop and take time off as you want.
 

Olympics777

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jun 16, 2014
Messages
182
Location
Moscow ID
I guided when I was 18, I thought I’d enjoy it. Honestly it sucked, I’d never do it again. The guys who pay to hunt elk here in Idaho from the east coast all seem to think there’s a bull behind every tree and there’s not. The pay isn’t great, I got paid 150 a day, but after taxes it was really like 100 bucks a day, and you work from 2:30 in the morning until 11:30 at night. And you still have to find a different gig the rest of the year. Personally I also think most outfitters are lying thieves. I also did some time in the military and that was enjoyable for me, I’d recommend it. I’m an electrician now and that’s the bees knees, pays good out west and I can take off time whenever I want.
 
Joined
Feb 19, 2023
Messages
496
Location
Montana
I guided for 18 years full time hunters in the fall, fly fishing in the summer, and snowmobiles in the winter or I worked in ski shops. Lifestyle was a blast, money was not great. Once I got married and had kids it became extremely tough, being away all over the west for 8 months. Definitely cuts into your own hunting and free time. With a family any free time you do have is spent keeping life in order not necessarily doing what you want. I would recommend the coast guard route until you become established in life and set yourself up for success financially. Speak to some outfitters and see if you can get on part time for a few hunts a year, or guide a few fishing trips a week or month on the side to become better aquatinted with the industry. Honestly to be really successful you need to build a solid reputation and a repeat clientele. I worked for 3 different fly shops and 3 different hunting outfitters throughout the year to be able to have enough guide days to make a living. In the end my business was almost 80% repeat and the tips had improved by 200% from what they were when I first started. I could no longer sustain the time away from home and family and ultimately had to move on. I full well intend to return to guiding at least part time once my kids have graduated highschool and started their own lives. Good luck to you whatever you choose.
 
Joined
Dec 9, 2023
Messages
13
I’m 21 years old and trying to figure out what I want to do in life, I’m looking into the coast guard but I’m a little bit apprehensive about enlisting with being married soon and potentially being underway on a ship/cutter for over half of the year… but my dream is to guide hunts/ fishing trips… I travel out to Wyoming, sd, and out west in general every year just to hike, explore and hunt predators… I live on the east coast and we have some good deer hunting but it’s not the same world over here. Those of you that guide, how did you get into it? I’m a young guy and I’m getting married soon so I need to get things moving one way or another
Not a guide but always wanted to be! Sounds like a dream job! Good luck.
 
Joined
Sep 7, 2015
Messages
749
Unless your the owner/outiftter you won't make much at all, and you'll probably never have time to do your own hunts.
I considered going to guide school right after high school and glad I didn't. The money sucks, it's a hard life, and in the off season you have to find other work.

I work full time at a paper mill, and the last couple years I've taken a side job as a guide for an outfitter im friends with while I'm on vacation.
It sucks, it's stressful and it's really not worth it. I probably won't be doing it again.
I make $300 a day. So for 5 days, I made $1500. That's before taxes. I used my truck, I paid for gas every day And food. My first year I made less per day. It's not worth the stress to me, to limit my own season to make sure the client is successful while battling public land and the public.

Your best bet, is to goto lineman school, journey out and in 4 years you'll be making $200k + a year. Have plenty of jobs out west where u can work, take off a few months to do your own hunts ans then go back to work.

I regret not doing that 20 years ago. Now I'm too old to start over. I should have listened to my mom.


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N.ID7803

WKR
Joined
Nov 25, 2020
Messages
526
Location
N. Idaho
Check out forestry. Great career outside! If you are willing to hike and learn you can’t beat the job. Lots of opportunity in the industry.
 

LFC911

WKR
Joined
Jul 15, 2020
Messages
673
Location
Lenexa, KS
I think it is pretty cool that you're asking this question at your age. 35 years ago I got married at 20, it was probably best decision of my life. I was a Firefighter in the Army Reserves at the time, college dropout and and just started my first f/t job. I posted on another thread that i think a f/t FF is the best job you could have and be able to take a lot of time off to hunt, most work 10 days per month and have a f/t side hustle on the side. Pay is good to great short of owning your own business. Most FD's around here require FF 1 (one semester and 3 credit hours) and a standardized physical agility test to apply. Good luck in whatever you choose to do and keep us posted.
 

rhsmith3

FNG
Joined
Jan 21, 2021
Messages
44
Location
East Oregon
Lots of great advice here. Wish I had this resource about 15 years ago.

I really enjoy guiding and meeting new clients.

Everybody’s scenario and priorities are different, if I could that’s what I’d be doing full time.

Just remember, you could spend lots of time, lots of effort and most your money to become a great hunter and guide… or learn a trade and take time off to actually hunt for yourself….
 

Zumbro2CO

FNG
Joined
Feb 11, 2025
Messages
1
I work as a year round hunting and fishing guide right now. Make decent money, hunt more for myself then I did prior to guiding year round. The catch is you have to be willing to travel to follow the seasons. I spend about 6 months in Alaska then the rest of my year is split between Montana and Texas. As for getting into guiding, check out a guide school. Royal Tine is about the best in the industry. As mentioned above Pat with Swan Mountain is a joke. There are ways around the guide school route but it’s an industry where who you know still gets you far. If you’re serious about it feel free to message me and I’d be more then happy to tell you things I wish I woulda known or thoughtful about 10 years ago when I started this guiding thing.
Hey! If you’re willing I’d like to talk to you about this. I just can’t figure out how to PM on this.
 

Dogone

FNG
Joined
Dec 25, 2023
Messages
78
I am an outfitter. Most guides don’t last more than one season. They do not understand that it is a real job. Not just goin huntin. You are paid to do the work and use your brain, not just go along like they were a buddy. You are there to serve them and could learn a lot from a good waitress. It is 80 % personality and 20 % hunting skills.
I paid them a lot of money, as much or more than good jobs. High wages did nothing to improve their skills or work ethic. Can’t remember how many people said they’d “sure like to that for a season”
 
Joined
Oct 19, 2017
Messages
1,221
I am an outfitter. Most guides don’t last more than one season. They do not understand that it is a real job. Not just goin huntin. You are paid to do the work and use your brain, not just go along like they were a buddy. You are there to serve them and could learn a lot from a good waitress. It is 80 0/0 personality and 20 0/0 hunting skills.
I paid them a lot of money, as much or more than good jobs. High wages did nothing to improve their skills or work ethic. Can’t remember how many people said they’d “sure like to that for a season”


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Joined
Jun 3, 2024
Messages
50
The great bison herds are gone. Ivory hunting is pretty risky nowadays. The red deer hunting is more of an industry than an adventure….. How else can a man make a living hunting?!? Sure you don’t pull the trigger, but it’s your hunt as much as the clients’. It’s a partnership and you’re still out there hunting.

Those that rag on guiding are either jealous that they don’t have what it takes, or good liars - we can’t have everyone living the high life. Someone has to make all those computers and other things work….. I quit guiding and tried a job once. Couldn’t get back to the wilderness fast enough!

Plus you have the most important thing it takes to live the lifestyle - a good partner with a career! Know what you call a guide without a steady woman? Homeless.

You’re young. Write outfitters in Alaska, Africa, Down Under, and the West. Someone will say ‘yea come on out we’ll put ya to work’. It’s not like it’s a 4 year commitment. If you don’t like it at least you know.
 

NRA4LIFE

WKR
Joined
Nov 20, 2016
Messages
2,076
Location
washington
My brothers tried it, did not go well. They made little to no money, one of them was seriously injured, they had one guy shoot himself and had to haul him out 10 miles dead and many other stories. Move to Seattle and make $22 an hour at McDonalds, you'll be better off.
 
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