Go Back  HuntingNet.com Forums > Regional Forums > Other Areas
 Quebec Winter Caribou Hunting >

Quebec Winter Caribou Hunting

Community
Other Areas Canada, Africa, etc.

Quebec Winter Caribou Hunting

Thread Tools
 
Old 09-01-2009, 02:32 PM
  #1871  
Spike
 
bjess's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Along the shores of Erie
Posts: 57
Default

Great pictures, you did very well.
Thanks for the info also, too bad were going to miss each other, I will be just arriving (Nov. 19-22) and you will be leaving.
Good luck to you all, hope you have another great year.
bjess is offline  
Old 09-01-2009, 04:17 PM
  #1872  
Fork Horn
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Montrose, Michigan
Posts: 102
Default

bjess the meat is very lean hardly no fat at all under the hide you might find small little jelly sack type objects on the hide its self when you skin it not to worry they are from the flies and never hurt out meat as for size of the bous about 225 to 300 lbs on average we cut all our own meat and get quite a bit of meat its like 2 to 3 medium whitetail depending on what you want done and i agree by far the best meat you will ever eat in my opinion.
fire3517 is offline  
Old 09-02-2009, 04:11 AM
  #1873  
Spike
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 12
Default A tip for you!

A tip I learned the hard way! As soon as you can gut, you will want to, for some reason the guts swell real quik, I mean within 1/2 hour crap is pushing out of the mouth, so you can imagine trying to gut one with the intesine all swelled up. My first one actually somewhat exploded I was a mess. I think they eat lykens or something like that and it must give off helish gas.
I did not tell you this but it is fun not to tell one of the new guy's and just set back and watch the fun!!! I think I was the new guy last time because no one told me!!LOL
drawbow is offline  
Old 09-02-2009, 10:31 AM
  #1874  
Spike
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 66
Default

I was told not to gut them just to remove hind q's and front shoulders and tenderloins ??
perrywinkle is offline  
Old 09-02-2009, 03:02 PM
  #1875  
Fork Horn
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Montrose, Michigan
Posts: 102
Default

drawbow is right they swell up from the lychen that they eat soon as you shoot one get to it tag it cause the fish cops are really patroling and get it gutted its the worst smell you will ever smell if they have time to ferment and expand from the lychen trust me perrywinkle you want to take the whole animal if you can there is a lot of meat there. By the way just had bou for dinner and it was great
fire3517 is offline  
Old 09-02-2009, 03:23 PM
  #1876  
Spike
 
bjess's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Along the shores of Erie
Posts: 57
Default

Hi Fire3517,
The bou for dinner was a nice jab at us who have none...lol, but hopefully we can say the same after November.
I also heard you need to gut them asap, thanks for reminding me.
Should I tell my son about this or do what drawbow suggests and let the new guy find out..lol
Just 2 1/2 months to go, can't wait!
bjess is offline  
Old 09-02-2009, 03:41 PM
  #1877  
Spike
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 66
Smile your eat bou and im not

ok fire ill gut'em, your eating bou im not, so ill gut them since this is my frist trip for bou ill do what the pro's says to!! gutting them is part of hunt for me ,if im gutting something must mean my matthews went twang....
perrywinkle is offline  
Old 09-02-2009, 05:01 PM
  #1878  
Spike
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: N.C.
Posts: 7
Default

To trailer or not to trailer that is the .....?
seafoam is offline  
Old 09-02-2009, 06:05 PM
  #1879  
Spike
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 66
Default

can three guys bring all they need in a screw f-250 with 6'6" bed with cap , and bring back 6 monster boone and crockett bulls or is seafoam going to have to bring his trailer
perrywinkle is offline  
Old 09-02-2009, 08:56 PM
  #1880  
Spike
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 50
Default an eye opener

This is a detailed account of my hunt with Jack Hume Adventures. I can say that it was a trip of a lifetime and there were very many good things that happened. It was not a guaranteed hunt, nor would I want one, but all did not go as expected either. The purpose of this is for someone booking a hunt to have a heads up on things you might not think of.
Shortly after booking and getting a contract I was contacted by Richard or Amanda Hume that they were trying to compress their schedule and would I be willing to change dates. I had no issue with this and they threw in a bear license, fishing licenses, and knocked a couple hundred dollars off what I owed. A week before the trip I contacted them asking about if they had located caribou and they named 2 camps that had caribou.
Upon arriving in Montreal we met the other hunters in our group and had our orientation. We were being sent to Camp Amanda which was not one of the 2 camps mentioned the week before, but it was supposed to be the best camp of 2008. Upon arriving in Schefferville I met Richard who said there was a huge herd of caribou about 15 miles from camp and they could be there anytime. No issues on the flights and we met our guide and cook when we got to camp. Our guide and cook were both wonderful.
For the first 4 days of camp no one saw a caribou. My son and I saw a wolf on day 2. On day 5 I saw a cow and a calf and my brother saw a small bull which ran past the other father/son combo at a distance. My son and the last hunter still had not seen a bou. That night they said that they were going to move us to another camp if the caribou did not arrive the next day, however we would only be allowed to shoot one caribou, which is something I had not noticed when reading brochures or websites and will touch on later.
On day 6 at 10:00AM Richard contacted the guide to see if the caribou had moved in which they had not. They said they were in the process then of setting up the other camp and that we would be moved the next day. That day my son filled our bear license for the first kill of the camp. We also saw one calf that day. (my brother, my son and I, no one else saw anything)
Early on day 7 they informed us they would pick us up at 2:00 pm. However, by noon there was 50 mph winds and they said they could not fly. The day before had been beautiful and we could have hunted while they set up camp had anyone bothered to check a weather report, or maybe this was how they planned it. My son and I saw a cow and a calf that day.
On day 8 the wind had subsided some, but they said they could not fly due to snow in Schefferville. At this point I told my son that the next day when the hunt was over, they would find a way to pick us up under similar weather conditions. At 8:30 that morning the other son I mentioned previously killed a respectable bull and by evening had limited out with a cow and his dad got a cow. My brother shot a cow that day, and my son and I saw nothing. When news of the bull got radioed back to headquarters our move was history.
On day 9 which was our day to pull out we were hunting by 5am. My brother got his second cow, my son and i got one each. Just before quitting time the other father got a bull similar to his son's. Even the guide said no comes up to shoot a cow, you can get one of them in a pasture for way less than $5000. My son and I and the one other hunter had not even seen a bull and he did not even have the chance to pull a trigger on a cow. Upon arriving back at Schefferville Richard went directly to the other father and son and told them he was glad it worked out for them. He told the rest of us to go up and register our caribou and when the one hunter said he had none, Richard took him aside. He later told me that he was told they would "work with him" if he rebooked. We did fill out surveys which I did not give him good marks due to never getting moved, but as of yet have never heard back. I learned on the way back to Montreal that 2 camps had caribou, with one camp killing 9 bulls and a cow for 5 guys. 2 camps also got moved with each hunter killing the one allowed bull. The other camp had kills, but I never heard how many. Upon arriving back at Montreal I was astonished at how few nice horns there were. Many were far less nice than the ones we took at Kisk on our winter hunt and some hunters even kept cow horns.
Now I would like to touch on the 10 reasons listed to book a hunt with Jack Hume Adventures.
1. Experience: in our case it was the guiding and cooking that showed experience!
2. High ratio of spare camps: meaningless if they have no caribou. The camp they moved people to and promised us was in Labrador and not even one of Hume's own camps.
3. Access to both herds: Not in our case, the Leaf River Herd was too far north yet to help out.
4. Customer satisfaction: Let's not go there in our case!
5. Mobility, Richard Hume has his own plane and is a pilot: The cook told us that he is not licensed to haul passengers, only cargo. I told her to pack me in a box and have him take me to the caribou! Also, no mention here of only shooting one animal if they have to move you.
6. Success over 90%: Even counting cows which is not what we were after we were at 75% and less than 20% on bulls. The people that got moved were at 50%. With these numbers, it would seem difficult to pull out 90+% this year.
7. Owner operated: No argument on this one.
8. Safety Cessna available for emergencies: Perhaps Richard is allowed to haul passengers in an emergency?
9. Fair chase hunts: Again no argument, it may have been more fair for the caribou than for us!
10. Competitive Price: As long as you get what you paid for!
bob in pa is offline  


Quick Reply: Quebec Winter Caribou Hunting


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.