Free: Contests & Raffles.
If you really want, and I mean really want to hunt moose then you need to just apply in Idaho, cough up the $2,200 bucks and get the tag, some very easy draw odds for decent bulls.
I was extremely disappointed in my photo ops this year in Hangman and the Idaho side of it. Definitely a decline. Its pretty sad as the moose were a success story, but another user groups success story is now capitalizing on it.
With maximum points (19) the odds of drawing a 49 Degree North tag are currently about 1 in 125. I think the best advice is to apply for as many units as possible (currently four) each year. If drawn in any unit, you will find quality moose.
There's no possible way moose odds ever get close to 1 in 15. But I sure wish that were true!
Quote from: Bob33 on January 20, 2014, 01:40:48 PMWith maximum points (19) the odds of drawing a 49 Degree North tag are currently about 1 in 125. I think the best advice is to apply for as many units as possible (currently four) each year. If drawn in any unit, you will find quality moose.Definitely good advice, although I'm not sure about the math. In 2012, there were 13,068 49DN applicants with an average of 6 points, or 470,448 total numbers in the draw. Divide by 21 49DN tags, equals 22,402 numbers in the draw per tag. Someone with 19 points would have 361 numbers in the draw. 22,402/361 = 62, or 1:62 odds.If that same person put in for three other units, his/her overall odds would get down to 1:15 or so.
Quote from: bobcat on January 21, 2014, 10:49:05 AMThere's no possible way moose odds ever get close to 1 in 15. But I sure wish that were true!Ummm, okay. Feel free to point out where the math is incorrect. I'm not a statistician, but I think that math gets you pretty close.
Quote from: WAcoueshunter on January 21, 2014, 10:36:12 AMQuote from: Bob33 on January 20, 2014, 01:40:48 PMWith maximum points (19) the odds of drawing a 49 Degree North tag are currently about 1 in 125. I think the best advice is to apply for as many units as possible (currently four) each year. If drawn in any unit, you will find quality moose.Definitely good advice, although I'm not sure about the math. In 2012, there were 13,068 49DN applicants with an average of 6 points, or 470,448 total numbers in the draw. Divide by 21 49DN tags, equals 22,402 numbers in the draw per tag. Someone with 19 points would have 361 numbers in the draw. 22,402/361 = 62, or 1:62 odds.If that same person put in for three other units, his/her overall odds would get down to 1:15 or so.Average points don't work for this. You need to compute "names in the hat" individually. There were 890,434 names in the hat for 49 DN. See below. Example - for the three applicants with 19 points, there were 1083 names in the hat: 19^2 x 3.Points Applications Names19 3 108318 5 162017 332 9594816 189 4838415 203 4567514 568 11132813 568 9599212 584 8409611 617 7465710 677 677009 847 686078 860 550407 875 428756 992 357125 1095 273754 1130 180803 1148 103322 1185 47401 1190 1190Totals 13068 890434
"I just added up the numbers for Hangman and got 166,592/7/361 = 1:66 for someone with 19 points. If you also applied for three of the other less popular units (Kettle, Three Forks, etc.), overall odds with four choices should be down in the 1:25 range."A person with 19 points, assume he lives long enough does have some hope of drawing in his lifetime if he puts in for multiple units every year. Still, he would have to put in with the with 1 in 25 odds for 17 years to get to a 50/50 chance of drawing. Anyone with less than 19 points obviously has worse odds.