Curious if anyone has seen data for this ? You would think states would be able to put together some sort of data for this, but perhaps, there is a reason they do not. I am guessing 12% of the NR hunters who hunt exclusively public lands without a guide or outfitter harvest an elk, cow or bull. Anyone else care to guess ?
If life were only that easy. I don't know if you could truly ever quantify a "GOOD" number to work from. Each NR hunter is going to be so different so here are a few examples of factors:
Have they ever hunted the West before?
What physical/mental shape are they actually in?
What knowledge do they have about hunting in general and elk in specific?
How much time do they have?
Are they hunting alone or in a group?
Do they have a resident/local contact?
How did they choose the area that they are hunting in?
And on and on and on.
I think that you are probably a little optimistic as to put the NR kill rate at 12%. I would think that it would actually be in the 4 - 6% range for the total NR elk hunting population. Since the invention of 24/7/365 hunting shows that are averaging a 85+% kill rate, many NR hunters are so disappointed to not find every opening filled with elk
"as seen on TV!" I have found that a lot of NR hunters are extremely surprised to get into the Western "hills" and try and catch their lungs up with that low octane air of the West only to be discouraged very quickly. I have seen many that have never even imagined what a 400 yard shot looks like let alone the view in a mile long park.
My experience and view comes as a NR who has hunted the West since the early '80's, including 10 years of working as an elk hunting guide. After lucking into an early elk kill, I went through a several year drought mostly because of my own mistakes but I learned a lot and even this past fall, the bull that I took, helped me learn some new things to use this year. I have made some incredible connections and have accumulated a lot of experience and knowledge of areas to hunt. Even with those years of experience because of the hard winter of '16, I was scrambling on where to hunt in '17 as the game numbers were so down in my regular hunting grounds. So when you add someone like me into your NR number, who as my wife likes to say, will often fussy myself into tag soup because I know there is a bigger one over the next hill, I'm afraid that your numbers won't tell the whole story.
I think that the only thing that will give you any kind of statistics that you can somewhat begin from are total number of animals taken vs: number of hunters.
Numbers are just that...… numbers. Then of course the old adage goes...…..
"FIGURES DON'T LIE BUT LIARS FIGURE!"
I'm just going to keep on hunting, regardless what the numbers say!