I am curious about this comment that was made earlier.------"If you want to go way North, then earlier would be fine. I like seeing hundreds of animals a day, but I also like seeing big ones. "
Can you elaborate on that. We want to see hundreds as well. We would probably rather deal with cool weather than bugs. Is that possible? Thanks again for all the help.
Never flown out of Bettles, so I'm not sure how timing works out there. I've only hunted the WACH in 23 and southern 26. I consider 26 "way North".
I really think bigger bulls migrate later... not based on internet heresay, but my experience. My experience is the big migrations are an amzing site. When you can sit at one spot all day and look out over miles of tundra and see animals every direction in large numbers... its a great feeling. A nature show at its best. BUT great bulls seem far and few between. Once these bigger groups get past you by a few days it seems there are small groups with bigger bulls. No science here, just my opinion based on experience. The migration
seems later each year.
I'm ok with not shooting anything, so going later doesn't bother me.The adventure makes the trip, not the kill for me nowadays. The caveat is I've also never gone to late to shoot something. I hate mosquitos... I'll deal with them for a moose, but prefer not ata caribou camp. I also like a
little snow because spotting the animals easier. It could be a curse as well.
If its your first and possibly only trip, then go when your outfitter or transporter recommends. Just make sure they are willing to spend the extra time (and gas) flying you to where the animals are... not waiting days for them to arrive near your camp. The migration is like a bell curve... no animals, a few animals, a lot of animals, then few animals, then no animals.
I ask the trasnporter, "what is the latest drop camp you'll accomodate?". That is my prefered way for setting dates on a caribou hunt.