Spotting Scope for Goats

Joined
Mar 16, 2025
Messages
54
Location
Alaska
I am looking to see what others are preferring for a spotter for mountain goat. Are you going with the biggest/baddest scope you can find, or are you going light and compact?

How much are you relying on a huge magnification scope for determining sex? I seem to do okay determining sex based on behavior (lonely goat, or with 1 or maybe 2 buddies), and then picking Billy’s out of larger groups (usually smaller guys though).

I’m looking to upgrade from an older 15-45x Leupold. It’s been on a few goat hunts with me and has been fine, it has never been a failure point on a hunt, but I have been wanting to upgrade. My preference would be a Kiowa 55, but I don’t want to be under-scoped.

Eventually a new scope might pull double duty for sheep, but for the foreseeable future mountain goats are my primary focus, I just can’t get enough.
 
I am looking to see what others are preferring for a spotter for mountain goat. Are you going with the biggest/baddest scope you can find, or are you going light and compact?

How much are you relying on a huge magnification scope for determining sex? I seem to do okay determining sex based on behavior (lonely goat, or with 1 or maybe 2 buddies), and then picking Billy’s out of larger groups (usually smaller guys though).

I’m looking to upgrade from an older 15-45x Leupold. It’s been on a few goat hunts with me and has been fine, it has never been a failure point on a hunt, but I have been wanting to upgrade. My preference would be a Kiowa 55, but I don’t want to be under-scoped.

Eventually a new scope might pull double duty for sheep, but for the foreseeable future mountain goats are my primary focus, I just can’t get enough.

If it’s going to be for sheep too, go big and bad. I have the 88mm Kowa and can’t say enough good about it. Previously had the razor 65mm, and it was sufficient. But the bigger glass is in a different category.

I have found I am never upset having the equivalent of a 1/2 a day of food extra weight in my spotting scope… never once has someone complained about being able to see too good.

Go big, and then later on down the line squirrel away some $$ if you really want to drop your pack weight. For me? Even if I had a bad 55mm, I’d probably keep brining my 88mm… it’s just too slick!

This also pertains to hunting style too. Say you can glass with big glass from the rig and then run and gun with the 55mm once you’ve acquired your target…thats a totally different thing to consider… id say it depends your usual hunting style.

Buy once, cry never!


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If it’s going to be for sheep too, go big and bad. I have the 88mm Kowa and can’t say enough good about it. Previously had the razor 65mm, and it was sufficient. But the bigger glass is in a different category.

I have found I am never upset having the equivalent of a 1/2 a day of food extra weight in my spotting scope… never once has someone complained about being able to see too good.

Go big, and then later on down the line squirrel away some $$ if you really want to drop your pack weight. For me? Even if I had a bad 55mm, I’d probably keep brining my 88mm… it’s just too slick!

This also pertains to hunting style too. Say you can glass with big glass from the rig and then run and gun with the 55mm once you’ve acquired your target…thats a totally different thing to consider… id say it depends your usual hunting style.

Buy once, cry never!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
10-4. Thanks for the input. It kind of confirms what I’ve been thinking, if I could only have one it should probably be a big one… but then I see those little scopes and drool at the size lol. I’ve never been hindered by my shitty scope yet but I would feel like a fool if I was, after spending thousands and preparing for months for a hunt.

Regarding hunting style: my goat hunts so far have been fly-in or boat drop off followed by a couple solid days of bushwhacking to get to goat terrain. One concern with being underscoped would be spotting some goats from the drop off point and wasting a few days effort getting to just a huge pack of Nannie’s without a Billy. That would suck, but I am not sure how realistic that concern is and I am well aware of the packing-your-fears element of backpack hunting, which I try hard to avoid.

Cheers!
 
10-4. Thanks for the input. It kind of confirms what I’ve been thinking, if I could only have one it should probably be a big one… but then I see those little scopes and drool at the size lol. I’ve never been hindered by my shitty scope yet but I would feel like a fool if I was, after spending thousands and preparing for months for a hunt.

Regarding hunting style: my goat hunts so far have been fly-in or boat drop off followed by a couple solid days of bushwhacking to get to goat terrain. One concern with being underscoped would be spotting some goats from the drop off point and wasting a few days effort getting to just a huge pack of Nannie’s without a Billy. That would suck, but I am not sure how realistic that concern is and I am well aware of the packing-your-fears element of backpack hunting, which I try hard to avoid.

Cheers!

I would jab back and say this….. those new image stabilizing spotters, at a smaller objective will be MUCH more valuable when it comes to aging rams on a windy hillside… it certainly is a major breakthrough in the optics world. And something to consider as well.

IF I ever buy another spotter, it will be one with IS.

Don’t forget to consider that.


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I decided to go big and bad and get the swaro atx 115 for my sheep tag last fall.

From the truck, it's amazing glass. Packing it around is a different story though. I wished I had something smaller.

I'd say get something in the middle for size but top quality glass. Then spend a lot of time field judging, to build that instinct to size up a big billy.
 
I like the swaro STC
Also Ben Reynolds who is an Alaskan sheep hunt ( killed a # of sheep) and is also on the slide I believe has switched to the swaro compact and doesn't feel limited with it.
If I was going to buy another compact spotter I would consider the Kowa as the swaro focus is very touchy on refining the focus
 
Thanks for the responses so far, hope to get more. Those Leica and Meopta options are interesting, nice to see that there appear to be some solid options in the price bracket below the swaro and kowa lineups.

Out of curiosity, who is using their phone for the added optical zoom to compensate for a lower zoom range on a smaller scope?

I’ve done this with my junker scope, but I already knew it was a Billy I was looking at, just wanted to capture the moment. See pics
 

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