Ive never owned horses goats llamas mules or any pack animals until 1.5 years ago.
Everything Nick and Squirrel and Bull n Heat. mentioned iI agree with.
I live in wyoming and spend a fair amount of time in the Winds, Wy range and GV.
I had been on a couple hunts with horses before, but these were the horses that were saddled 3 times a year, once in spring, once the week before elk hunt, then the hunt. no thanks. ive been rolled on by a horse on one of those trips. again, no thanks. im sure good horses that are in shape would be a different story.
if I had a mentor or knew anything about them I may have tried mules or horses. my wife is not interested in them though, she likes to walk , we love to hike and walk , we do everyday.
Had one hunt 2 years ago with goats, buddy had pack goats, it was my first trip owning llamas and they came too, they didn't really care for the goats, but weren't scared of them , again no thanks you can have the goats, needy, whiny, poop everywhere, want to get in my tent, want to cuddle , no thank you. but the price is right on them, but like OP stated, its revolving door with them, short use time. always raising and getting rid of especially if you want a big enough string to handle any hunt. we regularly are 10+ miles in for elk and deer
With that said, I was fortunate to meet a nice lady that has pack llamas near me, she allowed me to take them on trips to get them exercise, and get them in shape 2 summers ago, I spent quite a bit of time walking camping packing with them for the spring and was blown away how easy they are.
I purchased 3 that fall, then 2 more last spring, then I just purchased 2 more this winter. I have 7 now.
I will take my llamas anywhere I can go or want to go. they amaze me every time I take them out.
Someone mentioned no personalities, Nick and Squirrel will disagree as will I, they have some great personalities. they amuse me every time I take them out, they are level headed, and will do just about anything you ask of them. my llamas were in tremendous shape last fall.
in fact my newest llama last year, was a 5 year old stud. he packed my entire mule deer out head, meat (bone in) by himself. he had never been next to a bag of meat or blood that I know of, I walked over laid the panniers next to him, let him smell them while I was getting the other boys ready, head and rack laying next to him. he smelled it, then just went back to browsing. my llamas are so calm and easy to use, its ridiculous.
others have mentioned the same.
To the OP mule deer hunting, llamas are quiet, everything they do is quiet. eat sleep walk even when they spook they are pretty quiet, unless one alarm barks. which also is pretty quiet compared to mule horse or even a goat. my boys are smart, they understand their roles , work as a team, and I feel like I can take them anywhere anytime and be successful. I owe Squirrel a nod for helping me with a stubborn llama I had, no more problems, he's a good boy and a heck of a lead llama now.
This years hunt I was camped directly below a burn area I harvested my buck, watched that buck for 4 days before I got him, he could see my camp, my llamas, my orange tent all of it, every night he would feed down to water, every morning he would feed up to bed, he was within 800yds of my camp for 4 days. its a big burn, hard to shoot in, took me several days before I figured out his pattern and I had one shooting lane about 15' wide he would pass through every day once the sun got high enough, I made a place to be able to shoot up to him at a steep angle, and waited, got him at noon on a friday 530yds
my llamas were 50 -75 yds behind me the whole time...
With that being said, I dont know if any other pack animal would have been tolerated like myself and llamas were those 4 days. I was quiet, as were my llamas.
Ive used my llamas on archery and rifle elk too, leave them at camp some days, take them with other days, mainly so they dont get bored, get them some exercise and I think they enjoy it.
My neighbor shot his first elk in 20 years, my llamas were 100 yds away in the open in a meadow the elk could see them, but came out anyway and he got his first elk in a long time.
they have never hurt my chances hunting with them. they carried 5 elk and one deer out last year
not all mine. I took them for a walk the other day, it was like they hadn't missed a beat, yes their not in the same shape they were in October,, but they know what to do and when to do it...
as long as I can walk the mountains, I will , and I will lead my llamas everywhere I go. they love it, they're patient, they work hard, and they have absolutely made my hunts and summers more fun.
IMO llamas are the best pack animal for mule deer. and frankly everything else unless a person cannot walk and needs to ride, that's the only draw back to them. Easy on feed, easy on water, easy on the trails, easy on the handler, easy on everything really.
I know that will make the horse and mule and goat guys a little upset,, but for ease of use, I dont think any other animal compares to a pack llama.