npaden
Well-known member
I forgot to mention that he was a super old deer. Just had 3 teeth left in the front and those were worn down next to nothing. Haven’t had a chance to see the molars but the guide said he was a very old stag.
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Does the plural nature of this statement mean we will be seeing pics of an other dead stag?these trophy stags
Great shot. I spend many an hour working out how to get to that patch of beech forest behind you, it's public land.Shot mine this morning. Eating lunch and then doing the helicopter ride out for a tahr hunt this afternoon.
Haven’t had a chance to get the good photos from the guide so here are a couple I took with my camera.
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SpectacularShot mine this morning. Eating lunch and then doing the helicopter ride out for a tahr hunt this afternoon.
Haven’t had a chance to get the good photos from the guide so here are a couple I took with my camera.
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Very cool.
Congrats to your son.
So a couple of questions...
Curious, did circumstances prevent getter a closer shot? Wondering what average shot distances people take for these stars.
What sort of hoops to get the horns/ head back to the States?
Might PM about cost at some point.
Looks like a great trip, appreciate sharing on Hunttalk.
Thanks for taking the time to elaborate. Those stags you guys harvested are pretty dang impressive.Part of the issue hunting this property is that they have a lot of fallow deer as well as the red deer. Where these stags were at was up on the hill with some fallow deer between us and them.
We actually spotted these stags about 800 yards off, closed to 700, then 600 and finally cut it to 500 and just ran out of places to hide. They had the high ground and there just wasn’t anyway to cut the distance. That stags stood there for 30+ minutes while the other stags were moving around and feeding. He seemed to have us pegged.
The guide was confident in his rifle and did a great job coaching my son through the shot. I think he dry fired 6 times before the live round went in the chamber. There wasn’t a stitch of wind so that helped too.
The way this property is laid out doesn’t really lend itself to close shots. Fairly open and the stags know where to go to get the sight advantage. The guide said that 500 yards was the 3rd longest shot taken on an animal with that rifle with the longest one being 620 yards so I would guess the average would be somewhere in the 300-400 yard range.
The guide said he prefers to have a calm animal that doesn’t know you are there than to have a animal on alert and ready to move even if it means taking a slightly longer shot.
The import restrictions are way easier than Africa and the main cost is just shipping to get stuff home. If you really had it together you might could bring them home with you if you split the skull plate or something like that to make it fit within the allowable baggage limits.
We are just going to take the easy way out and have it shipped home.
Pretty much 100% of the red stag hunts in New Zealand for trophy stags are high fence. You can hunt them on public land but your chance of success is going to go way down and you are going to be hoping to shoot a stag in the 250” (or less) type range. You can hunt public land for free and there is no guide required. No permit requirements either. No season, just 24/7/365 fair game. So you can see why it would be a pretty tough hunt and they aren’t going to get very old.Looks like a fun trip! I have heard that these guided stag hunts are typically high fence. Is that the case, or are the stags able to leave the property?







I was wrong on this. We ended up measuring them today. Interesting that they only get 3 mass measurements instead of 4 like deer and elk. Very tricky measuring up on the crown.I don’t think they actually ever measure them, or at least not for the size of ones we are shooting, but the estimate they are using is that Eli’s would have been 464” with both antlers and mine was estimated at 443”. His was 14 points on the right and 16 points on the broken off left, and mine was 13 points on each side.
The main beams are deceivingly short compared to elk but they make up for it on score with all the extra points.

