roadrunner
WKR
Northern Utah. I did price that back the end of 2020, first part of 2021 so maybe it has shot up since then.
Be surprised if it hasn't.
Last edited:
Northern Utah. I did price that back the end of 2020, first part of 2021 so maybe it has shot up since then.
I didnt end up ordering one, just priced it out. It was Selmans out of Tremonton, Utah. I got a new phone and cant find all the information I had.Do you remember who you got it from. Here in Colorado I can’t find a full beef for less than $3k. I still plan on doing the bison hunt but this seems like a great way to get a lot of meat instead of Costco.
Probably has. I remember looking at it at that time thinking it would be a good time to get one because all the restaurants were getting shutdown. We priced it out but didn't have room in our freezer and no room for a second freezer.Be surprised is it hasn't.
I wouldn’t throw money into the hands of anyone running a high fence operation. Just pay a local farmer to shoot an angus and be done with it- same thing, less drive.Greetings everyone. I am new to the forum. I live in Denver and ate tag soup last elk season here in Colorado. I work in healthcare and had a lot less time in the woods than usual because of the high volumes from COVID (yay). As a result, I have a bad case of empty freezer syndrome.
I'd like to go on a meat hunt and because my schedule is so limited was considering doing something that I'd never been interested in the past: high fence hunting cow elk or bison. I acknowledge this topic is likely polarizing between high fence, private herds and the fact that shooting tamed bison isn't really hunting. I'd would appreciate the forum's insight into my situation however and would be grateful if those who don't like the topic simply refrain from commenting.
I have found 3 private ranches in CO with the potential to work with my dates.
High Fence Cow Elk (non-guaranteed) $3k for 3 days/4 nights with a guide.
High Fence Bison Heifer $3k for 2 days/1 night (essentially guaranteed)
High Fence Bison Heifer $3.5k for 3 days/2 nights including skinning, quartering and cooling (they mention it so I included it, not particularly worried about field dressing).
- There is another outfit that potentially has "mature" cow elk "guaranteed" for $3k, I am just not sure about date availability.
With the following priorities in mind, what would you suggest I do?
1. Meat - quality meat/price = value
2. Freezer Filling Odds (would do less fun hunt to ensure I have meat for the next year)
3. Hunting experience (if cow elk would likely do rifle, if bison likely bow given ease and lower risk of meat damage)
Thank you for your thoughts and insight.
A few years ago I told my uncle I wanted to come over and shoot my own with my bow. He looked at me like I had three heads or something and just said "no". Not sure how accommodating most ranchers would be to that request, especially those that you don't even know. Of course I do love that meat more after several months of being fed grain.Just pay a local farmer to shoot an angus and be done with it- same thing, less drive.
A buddy shot a bison and he lined his truck bed with Styrofoam and put the frozen, packaged meat in his truck. Was about even with the top of the rails. Was a bull bison and not sure of weight on the hoof. A cow bison may yield less meat but the OP may still need a bigger freezer.Bison , AND trust me , if they will help field dress and butcher and cool . THATS A PLUS . That animal is a fing chore , lol . Bison is fantastic meat. Shit, look at Aron Snyder , he can kill anything, anywhere , anytime , unlimited hunts from back country to home lands . Greatest Hunter out there in my opinion . And he even pays for buffalo hunts for the meat . Great option . Good luck .
AGE IN YEARS | AVERAGE DRESSED WEIGHT (LBS.) (WT.-RANGE) | AVERAGE LIVE WEIGHT (LBS.) (WT.-RANGE) |
---|---|---|
1 | 370 | |
2 | 459(393–518) | 865(795–995) |
3 | 504(425–580) | 968(945–1150) |
4 | 616(383–775) | 1163(925–1300) |
You could probably walk up to it and shoot it in the forehead with a 22, just like at the butcher shop.I might just be doing a bison meat hunt myself, would the meat be better after they graze all summer vs hay fed all winter?
I think rifle for bison vs bow. Figure out where a neck shot would be an anchor shot.
I did. last year I went to Severson Outfitters in western CO (near Grand Junction). I accomplished my goal but can't recommend the outfitter. He didn't really listed to what I wanted and was not focused on delivering the experience I was after. He had personal plans during the time of my booked hunt and rushed me for the first bit of the hunt, his team even encouraging me to use rifle instead of bow as I planned and desired. I wanted to skin, gut and quarter the animal with his team but he disregarded this and essentially had his team do it (poorly), which led to lost meat and a damaged hide.So how did this go? Did u end up doing it?