Canada BC AB MB SK ON NB NL YT NWT NVT OTHER Whitetail Coues Hunts

Canada BC AB MB SK ON NB NL YT NWT NWT Other Whit etail Coues Deer Hunts

Click on the 4 digit hunt ID and you will see the complete details of that particular hunt.

Canada BC AB MB SK ON NB NL YT NWT NWT Other Whit etail Coues Deer Hunts

British Columbia No Discounted Hunts Available at this time.

Alberta
1610-CA-G-L-5000-North-MooseWDeerBBearFishWolfTrap-RTAA4LBE-N1OP-RO2DJE

Manitoba No Discounted Hunts Available at this time. 

Saskatchewan No Discounted Hunts Available at this time. 
Moose and whitetail all at the same location to be posted soon.

Ontario No Discounted Hunts Available at this time. 

New Brunswick No Discounted Hunts Available at this time.
New hunts available and will be posted soon, with a flight to Maine, and then drive 30 minutes north into easy licenses and low priced moose, Bear and whitetail hunting.

Newfoundland More coming with moose hunts
More Moose than People, and Moose license is available over the counter. In addition the moose hunt itself is a lower price than you would pay if you had a guide on the moose tag that took you 20 years to draw.
1620-CA-NL-G-L-4500-SW-MooseCaribouBear-OUN4DLXANDNEWF-C1OM-O1BR-High Success 99.9

Improve your success and you average moose size. Instead of hunting from Argos, and ATV's you cruse the shore line for moose. A low impact hunt to the max.
1622-CA-NL-G-L-5500-OPN-MooseBBearCaribou-LD-Fly-in-100 Percent Success
Yukon No Discounted Hunts Available at this time.

Northwest Territories - No Discounted Hunts Available at this time.
================================================================================
3 Rules from Hunting Saskatchewan that Contradict Conventional Deer Knowledge

I'm up in Saskatchewan for the week with some buddies hoping to wait out a big Canadian buck. It's still too early for the rut up here so the hunt consists of waiting over a bait pile; that's just how it's done up here. Over the three days I've been here, I've heard three statements from our outfitter, Brad Fry of Canadian Outback Outfitters, that run contrary to conventional deer wisdom I've heard back home. It follows as such:


1. 85 percent of mature bucks are killed between 10am and 2pm (during the first week of November)
Over Fry's years of hunting and guiding, he's noted that most bucks are killed in the midday hours, a few in the late afternoon, and a handful at last light. We've all heard and read that it can be productive to hunt through lunch, but 85 percent... That was a new one to me.



2. Weather: Nice people days make for nice deer days
Weather you would consider a nice late-fall day (cold and sunny) usually turns the best deer activity, Fry says. This runs against the idea that snow and light rain get the deer moving. I suspect this has something to do with the typically arctic weather Saskatchewan experiences. Deer have to consume more calories than they burn, and trudging around in two feet of snow during a blizzard burns a lot of calories—probably more than a deer can take in.

3. The rut hits the same time every year: November 10
Throw out weather, moon phase, and the Corrioulos effect. Deer are going to do their thing no matter what, and that's going to happen on 11/10 up here in Saskatchewan. Now, other factors might limit how much of the rut you witness from your stand (for example, unseasonably warm weather is going to make most of the action at night). Also, it's common to see some types of rut behavior, like a younger buck chasing does. But, these chases are more out of curiosity, not the urge to breed.

Keep in mind that these points come from real-world experience and anecdotal evidence from hunters on stand. Also this experience comes from the backcountry of Saskatchewan—it might not relate to farm country in Iowa or the hill country of Virginia. But, it's interesting to think about nonetheless. So, what's you take?
Share by: