Free: Contests & Raffles.
Total Members Voted: 105
As an addendum, in the 70's I went Elk hunting with a friend (first and last time hunting together) when I lived in Montana. We were driving in MY rig up the mountain, and I thought I would ask about distribution if we got an Elk. He stated "Whomever shoots the animal gets all of it." My rig and I am supposed to help haul and process it? No gas money? No meat from the harvest? Seriously?Always get the rules between you straightened out ahead of time.
...Buddy walks in from another access point on OP's off day and kills a nice 3 point (on public ground), while OP is at home and the OP is miffed. If the OP was my hunting partner, I would tell them to get off his high horse. I put in just as much work, anyone could have found that deer, anyone at any time and killed it.
You can’t burn all bridges with friends and family members for every small wrongdoing. You live and you learn. He sounds like a great guy that got some buck fever and maybe made a questionable decision. Keep hunting with him and all the locations you guys already hunt together, but the next time you find that great new spot with the big buck maybe just keep it to yourself. There will be other deer don’t let this eat at you for too long. Like an old guy in Alaska told me it’s easier to find a good wife than it is a good hunting partner and both sometimes come with some compromises
Hunting with a partner isn't enough to expect a portion of the the animal. If you expect me to stop my hunt and waste a day or two packing your animal.....then you should expect something (what??? that should be discussed long before it happens). We share a camp and hunt together and otherwise hunt independently, keep 100%. My freezers are usually full so I am very generous with folk who help. Sounds like a lot of folks on here are running lean on meat and don't like to share. Me and my hunting buddy split everything down the middle....period. Animal, Experiences, Work, Gas, Food, etc. It has worked very well for us over the last 20 years. We don't invite many others to hunt with us. On the rare chance we do.....if they help pack the animal is split accordingly (1/2 to the shooter and other half split between whoever helps pack). We also butcher our own animals and that is part of it....We butcher as a team. This post and folks responses are very eye opening to me. I guess to each their own....but my goodness, you all are overthinking the hunting experience!! It's suppose to be fun and good memories that last a lifetime. Life is to short to bicker over 30 lbs of ground deer.
Quote from: jrebel on October 27, 2024, 03:08:39 PMHunting with a partner isn't enough to expect a portion of the the animal. If you expect me to stop my hunt and waste a day or two packing your animal.....then you should expect something (what??? that should be discussed long before it happens). We share a camp and hunt together and otherwise hunt independently, keep 100%. My freezers are usually full so I am very generous with folk who help. Sounds like a lot of folks on here are running lean on meat and don't like to share. Me and my hunting buddy split everything down the middle....period. Animal, Experiences, Work, Gas, Food, etc. It has worked very well for us over the last 20 years. We don't invite many others to hunt with us. On the rare chance we do.....if they help pack the animal is split accordingly (1/2 to the shooter and other half split between whoever helps pack). We also butcher our own animals and that is part of it....We butcher as a team. This post and folks responses are very eye opening to me. I guess to each their own....but my goodness, you all are overthinking the hunting experience!! It's suppose to be fun and good memories that last a lifetime. Life is to short to bicker over 30 lbs of ground deer. My freezers are always full. If you want to give away meat that’s all good. If that’s what the hunt is all about and talked about before hand then sweet. If I called a friend and requested help packing. “Which I have never done” I would offer him meat. But for someone to say hey we drove together I should get a bunch from your animal! Is just comical to me. Helping out a friend for nothing is what friends do, and packing meat is fun and rewarding enough.I would much rather pack an animal out myself and give friends meat after the fact. If someone calls me and asked for my help I would not expect or ask for any portion of THEIR animal.
Poor etiquette for sure. How important is your friendship? If it's important, wish him congratulations and find another buck. Next time, you'll know better what to share with him and his tenderfoot friend.