HunterEldridge
FNG
How has everyone's experiences been with renting horses for a backcountry hunt? I have always wanted to make a DIY hunt like this just worry about getting on a falsely advertised horse lol.
They will eat most things that are green but should have some grass to graze on, not as much as a horse. Also they do well with little water, we would water them at least twice a day though they could get away with once or even no water for a few days. You may to bring some feed with you if you know you are going into an area with little feed but this would just be supplementary.Thanks for the input Llamas would be a great option as well how much feed and water did they require?
You handed out some very good advice. Anyone who reads it should really take it to heart. I am by no means as experienced as you. Sure wish I was and was few years younger to pack into back country by mule. I have put a lot of miles on mules in some pretty ruff terrain and did make a trip with plans on packing 12 miles into back country from the trail head solo with a horse and 2 mules. Had planned on staying until I either killed a bull or until the 4 weeks I had set a side for the trip was up.I’ll give you the clint eastwood answer (the good, the bad and the ugly).
I will start it with this many people have gone out and rented horses with 0 issues, or minor issues. Some have had horrific experiences. The biggest things I see (I am an outfitter, I have been packing stock for 20 years) are more dangers to the animals than to the people that are renting them. It’s something that the term “leave it to the professionals” is sometimes better than having an accident. Now I’m not trying to rent horses I don’t rent my stock out, never will. I’m in the business cause I love it, I love packing animals and I love helping people. I know I’ll never get rich outfitting but I enjoy it.
Now here’s some of the good
1. Harvested game can get packed out
2. Your gear isn’t on your back
3. You have a ride in and out
4. More weight more amenities in your camp
5. You can get your stuff in or out in 1 trip
6. Can cover more country cause ur not hiking everywhere
Here’s the bad
1. Horses need feed if you can’t find a good spot to graze them several hours a day or night you gotta bring some in, if the horse hasn’t been on green grass and you are grazing them on it they can founder, or colic. Colic can be fatal if you don’t know how to treat it. I’ve had horses colic on the mountain and lay down in the trail, it’s what they do, 4 hours later of going to get medicine and back horse was in the same spot, took me 30’minutes after an IV shot of banamine to get the horse on its feet and going down the mountain. Most rental companies have an agreement horse dies in your care you owe $3500, that price with the horse market is probably more up to $5000
2. Horses need water, a horse needs water to help digest its food so it’s not a water in the morning and water in the evening.
3. Ever tried to sleep at night with horses tied up to a tree or high line? Every noise wakes you up, you have to check on them make sure they aren’t hanging themselves, have a foot over a lead rope, laid down and can’t get up. How bout getting untied and running back to the trail head? Walking through an electric fence.
4. When ur gone all day hunting you still have a horse or 2 back at camp, few years ago I road into a camp and a guys mule was laying there dead tied to a tree cause it got its leg over the lead rope and fell down. He came back that evening with a note on his tent that said “got to your camp at 9:30AM, ur mule was dead, had its foot over the lead rope, you can see the struggle it had, nothing I could do sorry for ur loss, this has been reported to the USFS” we came back in the next day and the guy was packed out and gone with his mule laying there still 30’ off the trail. It’s actually illegal to not report it.
5. Horses are not go anywhere, they can die to and dangerous areas puts you and them at risk. Most injuries and accidents I’ve seen are people taking their stock into places they shouldn’t have gone
6. If you don’t know how to pack panniers properly, you’re gonna have an accident. Several times I’ve come down the trail to a yard sale and a hunter is wore out cause the saddle slid and the horse spooked and he can’t find it. We’ve found horses stuck in a deadfall from getting spooked and finally getting hung up, shaking, dripping sweat, cut up.
7. Even a minor accident on a horse can be the worst, doing this for this long we have had accidents. Somethings can be avoided, others can’t
8. Basic horsemanship will be a huge help but the more experience the better. Cinch sores, saddle sores, cuts, scrapes, lameness happen. Knowing how to deal with them will help but how do you know when it’s to bad to continue?
The ugly
1. Even very experienced horseman have died, we had one several years ago, they still don’t know what happened but the guys mule came runnin back to camo without him. When his party found him all they could tell was the mule slipped and fell and he hit his head on a rock.
2. How do you know when ur horse is to injured? I had a gentleman come down from a trail one time I had been back for about an hour unloading gear. He came in walking this horse that could barely put weight in one leg, I asked him if I could check it out for him, he said the rental company would be there in 3-4 hours. After checking the horse out we found it had fractured its back leg, the guy had been walking the horse from 8 miles in for 14 hours, I asked if he knew what happened, he said he was trying to get to his elk he shot, and was goin across a rock field when the horse went down. Said he knew that it was dangerous but said he rented the horse to pack the game so he didn’t have to. The rental company got there and took the horse to the vet, they brought him another horse to go get his elk and gear. When he came down he had 150lbs of gear and a whole cow on this poor horses back.
3. Know the weight limits of your stock. They say 20% of a horses weight is what they can carry but there is love weight and dead weight. I keep my stock to about 10% or 150-175lbs of dead weight. We work several months in a row so I try not to go over 150. This also has a distance factor, terrain etc. I’ve seen my biggest mules struggle one 5 miles of hard terrain. Uphill is hard on them but down hill is worse. Knowing how to pack ur gear so it doesn’t slide forwards or backwards. Much like you’d pack your backpack, ur not gonna wanna put the heavy stuff at the top and light stuff at the bottom. Saddle panniers are the worse, you can’t weigh each side to make sure ur even. Lash ropes and manty tarps can keep everything secured in a situation. I’ve always packed my gear based on terrain uphill more weight forward downhill more weight back.
Just trying to give you as much info as possible on all this sometimes the bad outweighs the good. My biggest concern with horse renters is you need to be ur first priority, ur stock next and ur hunt last. I personally usually put my stock ahead of myself, they rely on me to keep them safe.
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That instructor sounds like he knew what he was talking about. I think it would be a blast to learn how to pack in and out by horse or mules in itself. And I don’t mean just tagging along once or twice with someone that knows what they are doing. I think it would take a lot of trips packing to just begin to scratch the surface of being able to consider yourself a true expert at it. There is a lot to learn to be good, safe and know what your doing.Check my post in the saddlebag thread. Went to the clinic with different plans than I came out with. Reality check. Had a great time, plan to do it again with a professional. Taking care of the stock well and packing and unpacking basically consumes most of your day. Terrain, weather, equine problems and your hunt is over. Watched 2 bow hunters hike in 8 miles to backpack hunt in 70 degree weather, instructors response was no way in hell if they kill an elk they will get the meat out before it spoils.
When you turned them loose of a night. Was one a bell horse ? I mean how were you able to catch them ?Check my post in the saddlebag thread. Went to the clinic with different plans than I came out with. Reality check. Had a great time, plan to do it again with a professional. Taking care of the stock well and packing and unpacking basically consumes most of your day. Terrain, weather, equine problems and your hunt is over. Watched 2 bow hunters hike in 8 miles to backpack hunt in 70 degree weather, instructors response was no way in hell if they kill an elk they will get the meat out before it spoils. We packed in 8 pack animals plus rode 9 horses, all the animals but one were turned loose to graze all night. We packed in 12 50 lb bags of feed, 2/3 of each load was feed. Had a NPS packer with us that does day trips in his NP, said equine care with long wilderness trips was far greater than going home each day to feed and water.
Decker pack saddles, that’s what they are called. They are more expensive than saw bucks but I think would be worth the extra expense.One horse remained on a highline, the others loose. Once we started hanging the feedbags on the others were right back there. Think we had one wander off. Wrangler rode up the canyon and was back in 10 minutes. Several of the mules would follow packed without a lead. Was not familiar with barn and buddy sour, sure am now. Ponying a mule or mules down switchbacks I was told is the hardest part and I am a true believer now. I had one mule and had to keep its head near my knee otherwise it kept wrapping the lead around my horses tail which caused the horse to spook, try that on a steep downhill switchback. My instructor runs training clinics for the army which used mules and donkeys for missions in the mountains around the world. 5 day class, just scratched the surface. Have utmost admiration for you guys that do this as a job or lifestyle.
Instructor used amixture of sawbucks and Deckers, said if starting over would use Deckers. NPS used all Deckers. Watching the performance of the animals in the terrain I asked why anyone would use horses when mules are available, response was people like the looks of horses.
Anyone know where to possibly look into picking up a few used mules or horses in Montana? Don’t want to bust the bank, but am willing to spend a little extra to find good pack stock.