anderjas99
FNG
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2021
- Messages
- 13
I am curious to get the opinion of others who have been on horseback Moose hunts. I recently returned from a hunt in northern British Columbia where I was unsuccessful in killing a moose however I did shoot a nice Mountain Caribou. The horseback hunt for Mohs was rather disappointing for me in the overall style. I was wondering if anybody else has similar experience?
Essentially you would leave camp right before daybreak and horseback an hour and a half or so into the back country where you would have 30 minutes or possibly an hour at most to try and spot of moves before they bedded up into the dark timber at which point they were more or less impossible to find. We would then sit around for the rest of the day hoping to see a moose moving, which never happened, and then for the last hour or 2 before dark you hope to find a moose in a position that you would maybe have time to make a move on before dark.
The weather was cold, rainy/snow and windy so I do understand it was not ideal conditions but there was very little calling involved and I felt as though the opportunity to see a moose was very limited to first thing in the morning and may be later in the evening otherwise it was a mental game of staying optimistic for the majority of the day. The hunting was certainly not that classic calling into beaver ponds, Creeks and Willows etc. waiting for the sweet sound of a rutting bull.
The Hunt was certainly an adventure but my point here is I would have likes the outfitter to be more honest with me and the style of the hunt. I would like to know if anybody else has had similar experience with horseback cons or this was just a isolated experience that I encountered.
Essentially you would leave camp right before daybreak and horseback an hour and a half or so into the back country where you would have 30 minutes or possibly an hour at most to try and spot of moves before they bedded up into the dark timber at which point they were more or less impossible to find. We would then sit around for the rest of the day hoping to see a moose moving, which never happened, and then for the last hour or 2 before dark you hope to find a moose in a position that you would maybe have time to make a move on before dark.
The weather was cold, rainy/snow and windy so I do understand it was not ideal conditions but there was very little calling involved and I felt as though the opportunity to see a moose was very limited to first thing in the morning and may be later in the evening otherwise it was a mental game of staying optimistic for the majority of the day. The hunting was certainly not that classic calling into beaver ponds, Creeks and Willows etc. waiting for the sweet sound of a rutting bull.
The Hunt was certainly an adventure but my point here is I would have likes the outfitter to be more honest with me and the style of the hunt. I would like to know if anybody else has had similar experience with horseback cons or this was just a isolated experience that I encountered.