new guy to forum with a question

baboltin

New Member
Nov 25, 2014
1
0
hello,
Im Brad and I am interested in trying to apply for every state west of Kansas and wanted some tips on applying, want to start building my points, I also wanted to introduce myself and see if anyone had any tips . I will start applying for everything west of Kansas thanks
 

Hilltop

Veteran member
Feb 25, 2014
3,847
2,230
Eastern Nebraska
Hi baboltin and welcome to the forum. Your asking a very broad question that will require lengthy responses. If your looking for someone to do all the work for you, I suggest contacting a booking agent like Cabela's. If you want to do it on your own, see below.

Each state is very different in how they do things. I think your first step should be to put some time on each states web site learning about their application process and if they sell preference points for the species you are interested in hunting. Many states also publish drawing odds for the different species so you can research how many preference points it will take to draw certain tags. Its a fun process but requires hours of research.
 

OregonJim

Very Active Member
Feb 19, 2014
795
0
Oregon Coast
HT is right.

Check out the Eastmans MRS it has tons of information.
Bookmark each states Division of Wildlife page and start checking stats.
If you are a subscriber it (MRS) is available on line.
MRS will give you data on units and a decent idea of what it will take to draw.
Each state is different but the key is start building points.
There are decent hunts that are basically OTC but you have to put in the time researching.
It changes each year but you will get a good idea.

Go over to the new member board and give a good introduction it will loosing up the dialog.
 

hoshour

Veteran member
You didn't mention what species you are interested in but between 11 states and usually 5-6 species per state, that is a boatload of fees if you're really going to apply for them all. I think you'll find you need much deeper pockets than you think, especially since some states want license and tag fees upfront and in some states license costs are nonrefundable if you want to store up bonus points.

Some states are not worth applying in because the number of nonresident tags is too small, draw odds are too low, points needed will take you decades to accumulate or a host of other reasons. You need to do a good bit of research first.

I would definitely at least talk to a booking agent as HT suggested. I would also use the Members Research Section (MRS) found in the two Eastmans' magazines. It pulls a tremendous amount of information together for you and will save you a ton of time on what is going to be a huge undertaking, much bigger than you realize.

Call Eastmans' at (800)842-6887 and tell them you want to subscribe to both the Eastmans' Hunting Journal and Eastmans' Bowhunting Journal. Start your Eastmans' subscription with the recent issue that has the first cross-state MRS in it. That will help you narrow down the states. Then, look at the individual state MRSs each month.

The only problem you will have is that some states have application deadlines before the MRS is published for other states with later deadlines. To get around that, you can download MRSs from last year on the Eastmans' web site once you are a subscriber.

Honestly though, you won't be able to get through all this before you need to start applying. So, use a booking agent the first year or pick your states to apply for based on the two cross-state MRSs that are already out. In the first year, except in the random draw states, apply for preference and bonus points rather than specific hunts.

Don't rush. You'll waste a lot of money on states you won't apply for again once you know more. Don't apply in more than 3-4 states per species. Skip mountain goat and down the road hunt them in BC or Alaska.