Guaranteed permits – no drawings required! We have three large private ranches in New Mexico on which we conduct our antelope hunts. Two ranches are over 95,000 acres and one over 45,000 acres. Both properties have good antelope numbers, good buck to doe ratios, and very high hunter success on great quality bucks.
These New Mexico ranches are some of the very best trophy pronghorn hunts in the country, with numerous Boone & Crockett bucks produced every year! Both ranches are over 95,000 acres and are hunted on a very limited basis. This ensures that every year we are harvesting bucks in the right age class, which in turn gives our clients the best opportunity at that B&C trophy-of-a-life-time. We hunt these bucks out of three different ranch houses depending on the ranch booked.
Our guides spend several days out of the year pre-season scouting to ensure our hunters the best chance at the biggest bucks on these ranches. All of our guides are very competent and have many years of experience guiding antelope hunts. These hunts are three full days and are typically guided one-on-one. We are currently booking these hunts one to two years in advance so please call early to secure your hunt.
TIPS & FACTS
Site your rifle in 1-2″ high at 100 yards. This site in will have the hold point dead on at expected yardages. Expect shots to be 200-350 yards. Practice make the difference.
What do our guides carry on the mountain?: Back Pack, tripod, spotting scope, binoculars, rain gear, 2-3 head lamps, 2-3 knives, small first aid kit, extra jacket.
WEATHER
August
Weather for August Pronghorn hunts normally? hot and dry. Plan on highs in the 85 degree range, Lows in the 65 degree range.
September & October
Weather for the September/early October bugle elk hunts? Warm days cool nights. Plan on highs in the upper 60″s and lows in the 40’s. Chance of rain increases toward October, maybe even a kiss of snow.
October & November
Weather for the October/November mule deer hunts? Cool and down right cold. Plan on highs in the 50’s and lows dipping to 20’s. In some of the high elevation ranches 1 foot of snow may fall at anytime, although not the norm. Could it get any better than cold and snow in November? Nope!