mattmann
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2019
- Messages
- 115
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Chama Land and Cattle in NM. Jicarilla rez in NM. San Carlos rez in Az. Ted Turners Vermejo ranch over by Cimmaron and Raton, NM. There is another ranch that borders the Valle Vidal in NM but I can’t remember its name. Double H in NM. There are a ton of places to hunt for that kind of money and these are just a few in the southwest.I agree on the nice bull. To be honest, from Arkansas whitetail, anything will be “nice” lol. I would probably like the nice lodge option as my wife would likely tag along.
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Great boots, packs, guns/bows, range finders, vehicles, tags TAGS TAGS, clothing. You will spend the 20k but you’ll be better on the back end for having done so. If you just want wife and son to enjoy themselves even a mountain trip or a general bear tag next spring. You will see elk 100%, what’s the point of flying in and blasting just to have a hole in your pocketThe exact opposite of what you’re asking for here, but just pick up a tag for elk in the next 2-3 years. Make the 20k go a lot further, learn how to do it the right way. Lots of adult men go years sometimes decades without killing something but that’s just what elk hunting is. Fly in, drive in, rent a sick air bnb and hit the woods. Idk, just feels like you aren’t looking for the right thing. If you burn 20k and drop an elk it will be a short lived high. Give a man a fish vs teach a man to fish.anything short of life threatening conditions I’m not going guided for anything.
Most all of the ranches outfit and have to allow a draw for resident hunters, that is how the program works.I believe there are RFW outfitted hunts where one can buy the hunt from the outfitter. However, there are draws for RFW hunts that are only open to residents. Just to clarify.
The exact opposite of what you’re asking for here, but just pick up a tag for elk in the next 2-3 years. Make the 20k go a lot further, learn how to do it the right way. Lots of adult men go years sometimes decades without killing something but that’s just what elk hunting is. Fly in, drive in, rent a sick air bnb and hit the woods. Idk, just feels like you aren’t looking for the right thing. If you burn 20k and drop an elk it will be a short lived high. Give a man a fish vs teach a man to fish.anything short of life threatening conditions I’m not going guided for anything.
I'm definitely in the do it forever camp, however, PTO, cash, time away from family, etc..., all weigh heavily on Western hunting for NR coming from the Midwest or further. Ive been on 3 elk hunts- 1 as a hunter and 2 just supporting my daughter. I did a guided pack-in hunt in the Bob that was easy to get a tag for and around $5k for the outfitter fee plus around $1500 for the NR combo tag. I was blessed/lucky to kill a big bull on that hunt.If a biggish bull is one and done, pay for it upfront. If you want to do it forever, follow the above advice of getting some good boots, packs and sleep system then grind it out on easy to acquire tags.
I'm definitely in the do it forever camp, however, PTO, cash, time away from family, etc..., all weigh heavily on Western hunting for NR coming from the Midwest or further. Ive been on 3 elk hunts- 1 as a hunter and 2 just supporting my daughter. I did a guided pack-in hunt in the Bob that was easy to get a tag for and around $5k for the outfitter fee plus around $1500 for the NR combo tag. I was blessed/lucky to kill a big bull on that hunt.
The next hunt was a 10 day DIY hunt with my daughter on a youth hunt. We grinded the entire trip and did over 12 miles and more than 2,000 gain one day. We saw elk and just never had an opportunity at a shot.
The last hunt was in November as mentioned and was guided horseback in an incredible unit. She filled her tag on the first day.
ALL of these hunts were incredibly memorable and I plan to keep going until I can't any more physically. However, depending on the circumstances (budget, available time, etc...) it will continue to be a mix of DIY and guided. Personally, I'm too big a tight ass to spend the same money over 5 unsuccessful DIY hunts that I could've spent on 1 successful guided hunt, and that's regardless of whether its bull or cow tag. At some point I need a return on that investment in the form of meat in my freezer, and I think a lot of NR would agree even if they won't say it out loud.
In my personal case, the desire to go out West and elk hunt has almost completely usurped my desire to whitetail hunt in Iowa, and that's coming from a former whitetail fanatic. So the time and budget I used to spend on whitetail hunting has gradually shifted towards the next hunt out West.