oryx help for the few that are lucky

C

compasswest

Guest
Did this last year hope it helps again!

Since there were so many posts on the oryx hunts I thought I would try my best at offering a hand.

You need to take a deep breath and remember that the stress of the hunt for you is going to be almost unmanageable for that night before and even worse once you are on the base. Here is how it all works:

You?ll want to arrive the day before in time to drive out and find the gate that you need to check into. SR and SM are easy to find but the RC hunt gate was a little hard to find the first time. Once you have the location down head back to the hotel and check for, NO BEER in coolers, NO camera, be sure you have the permit and your ID in a folder along with your current registration and proof of insurance for auto and all in the folder, this is what they are going to check at the gate. You can stash a camera in the bushes in the AM outside of the main gate or I leave it with a taxidermist outside the gate. There will be taxidermists and butchers at most hunts outside the main gate. For photos SR has great areas jut out the gate to shoot photos, RC is more limited.

Lets say that the meeting time is 5am at the gate, don't worry about getting to the gate at 4am, your just going to get in the base and wait for 1.5-2 hours as they check everyone into the gate, but you will get a better parking spot! (more on parking in a bit) Arrive on time and wait in the long line of cars waiting to access the base. Once on the base and after EVERYONE is in they will lock the gate and they have a meeting. The meeting will address where you can NOT go and where you can, be sure you understand the areas that you are NOT allowed to hunt! Meeting will run 20-30min then you are off to the races for the hunt. Don?t stress the closed areas too much they really mark the areas well on the main roads. Plus game and fish officers will be ALL OVER the base for the hunt to help!

PARKING remember when you park to get into a spot that you can drive out of easy, they will end the meeting and NO BS people will RUN to the cars and take off to race to the spot they want to hunt. Its un-nerving to say the least, you heart will be in your throat, you'll feel your pulse pounding into your ears you'll feel like a 15 year old on the first deer hunt with your Dad again, TAKE A DEEP BREATH and settle down. Your going to get one, if you are calm and remember what I have written!!!!

GETTING TO HUNTING AREAS. Drive safe and smart and you'll have a great hunt. There are a ton of animals on SR and RC, SM has less animals but is still a great hunt. Harvest rates are 80-87% for the base and if you are willing to walk and glass you'll be 100% (more on hunting later). Study maps and pick an area based on gut feeling or info from MM or other sites and dive to that area. It will be light out as you leave the meeting so keep an eye out you might shoot one 100 yds from the starting point?..

HOW TO HUNT: GLASS GLASS AND MORE GLASS, I cant tell you how important GOOD optics are going to be on the hunt. 10x42 at a minimum for the hunt you need to glass big areas and judge them. I will talk more about judging later in this post. They are not easy to see at first, just remember to look for white and black in the fields, the areas are open grass to thick brush, first thing I do is find a high spot to glass pull over park and start looking. Remember they will run in groups from 3-100 you just never know. Once you find a group start to look for bigger body?s first then start to look over the horns. The adults and sub-adults will run with like age groups for the most part, the babys are brown and black with little white, they bread all year so you'll likely see a few in the cow groups, this will help you pick out the young animals as well as the cow groups. Bigger bulls will be in the areas but not always with the pack, I have shot 4 monster bulls that were bedded down all day all along in the middle of nothing?.. Hunt like you would Antelope! 90% of people are LAZY the other 5% will walk a little giving you all the great animals that you need to walk to if you are in the last 5% that is willing to WORK FOR IT, hunt like it's a once in a lifetime hunt, because it IS!!!

WHERE TO HUNT: I am willing to share info about the where to hunt more in private email and phone calls. Took me years to learn where to hunt and how to judge these great animals and public forums and blogs are just not the place to talk about it 100% openly, but I am more then willing to attempt to offer the same quality of information I am putting in this post even if we are not going to guide you. This is a once in a lifetime hunt, it is also one of my personal favorite hunts I have ever been on in the US for a great animals!!! I want everyone to have a wonderful time and help you be a 100% harvest hunter for this special once in a lifetime hunt!!!

HOW TO JUDGE: The first oryx hunt I did was with a friend, I have guided elk and mule deer in NM for years so he asked more my help in judging and glassing. I did all the same that you are doing right now, hunting for all the info I could find on oryx and how to judge and pick the right animal. I was able to find limited info at best on judging them so I decided we would be OK and just look for a big one. Well all the stress and confusion affected us just like it will you, we found a big group about 30min into the hunt in a location a friend had told me to hunt. Of the 30 animals 3 were much bigger then the rest, we looked them over picked the biggest bull and shot it. 34? bull in a group of 30 other sub-adult animals, we were MORE then happy with the hunt but we did what so many people do, we rushed with the stress of a once in a lifetime hunt and all the worry about only 2 days to hunt. If you just half ass work at it you will harvest one, do you need a guide, not really but judging is the HARD part, since that hunt I have not harvested a cow under 38? or a bull under 36? including some 40? bulls and cows as well!! Take a deep breath and calm down your going to do fine and harvest a great animal!

BULLS: The mature bulls will polish there horns in the brush, so as a result they will tend to have shinny horns more so then the cows. Bulls tend to have less visible rings on the top of the horn and have rings that are more spaced out and bigger gaps, and like I already said the horns shine in the sun! The bases are going to be 2-5X bigger then a cow this is where you need to be looking. Some of my best bulls have been 36-37 but HUGE mass on the base. Body mass is the second thing to look for. If there are a bunch of animals in a group look for the largest body first THEN look at the horns. Check for polished horns first then at the bases, then compare over all length. This spring I had a client who had never seen an oryx in the field, and was really nervous about the hunt and only 2 days. About 2 hours into the day we glassed up a big group walking in the direction of a road, we drove to cut them off, parked and got out and hid in the bushes and waited. About 15min later they all walked into a big opening, I glassed them all over and told steve they were all immature I knew this because the bulls in the group all had dull horns. Dull horns does not always mean they are not adult (I have killed adult bulls with dull horns) but all the body sizes in the group were the same, cows and bulls allowing me to make a quick decision not to shoot a bull, so as I pull Steve back to the truck almost kicking and screaming about only 2 days to hunt a second truck showed up, they asked if we were going to shoot the animals we said no but I told them 5th from the front was the largest in the group but a cow about 34?, they asked if they could harvest a bull from the group, we said no problem they shot the biggest bull in the group that we were looking at, it was a great bull but 31.5?. Later that day we glassed up a small group of adults about a mile into a flat, stalked into 400yds glassed them for 45min to pick the right one, Steve choose to harvest a huge cow in the group because the animal had great LONG horns and just was a beautiful animal. That 45min got steve in a grove and we shot a 38 3/8? cow at 427yds with a 300 WSM. Remember look for the biggest body then- bases- horns (dull or polished) - over all length of horns, a 40? animal will have horns that almost reach the rump of the animal, but also remember cows for the most part have longer horns.

COWS: They have longer horns as a rule, and thin horns compared to bulls. Look for tight rings and dull horns compared to the bulls. Mature animals tend to run in groups, don't let the biggest of the group fool you unless they are all adult animals!!!


Congratulations

You have drawn what I think is the best hunt in the western US, I place the same hope and prayer into my unit 10 or 9 AZ rut bow tags every year that I do my oryx tags???. Email anytime or call me for more info on the hunts and where when of the base! Hope this helps! Chris
Compass West Outfitters Have a great hunt and EMAIL ME PHOTOS
 
compass,

I did not draw, but I will remember your great tips for if and when it happens!

Thanks.
 
Compass,

I really want to thank you for the great information you provided. A buddy and I were lucky enough to draw the last Rhodes hunt for the 2009 season. I can't tell you how excited I am about the hunt and we will definitely use this information to our advantage.

Thanks again and good hunting to you.

IB
 
LAST EDITED ON Mar-19-08 AT 09:27PM (MST)[p]Chris,
Are you going to make it to this weekends hunt?

Jordan
edited
Ps very good post man
 
Very helpful info! Thanks for your time in putting this info together, This will help out alot and save us alot of time in our research.
~coolarrow!
 
Thanks Compasswest for the interesting info about the WSMR oryx hunts.

My friend and I were fortunate enough to draw the October '08 Rhodes Canyon hunt after several years of applying.

We have been inundated by outfitter information this last two weeks but we are planning on doing it ourselves.

I have one question now though, that you guys could help answer. I was wanting to hunt with my .270 Win. Is that enough gun to put one down? I would probably use 140 grain Nosler Accubond bullets. I also have a .338 Win Mag to use as well.

Thanks again for the info.
 
If you can shoot the .338 without flinching then I think it would be the preferable of your two choices. Oryx are tough beasts.
 
Wow that was AWESOME. thanks a ton, I drew for next year, Stallion, mid feb hunt. I printed your info to start my oryx file. Great stuff. I am going to try bow first day. Rifle after that.
 
A well placed shot from a .270 will do it, but the .338 would be better insurance.

These animals can absorb a surprising amount of shock for their size, and the easiest way to their vitals is a broadside shot through the shoulder. You need a solid bullet for that, and the .338 is a better recipe in my opinion.
 
When i was down there a few years ago we found a .270 bulet just an inch below the hide of my buddies bull. It was dead center perfect in the shoulder. No clue as to how a bullet would perform so crappy and get so little penetration. It had a bald patch there so when we skinned it I dug into the spot and popped the slug right out. All i can think of is that is was a REAAAAAALLLLLY long shot by someone and it bounced back off the scapula and ended up close to the hide again. We will never know I guess.
 
Guys

Thanks for the suggestions on the proper caliber of rifle to use to shoot an oryx. Looks like I'll be using my .338.
 
The 2 I've shot with my 7mm Rem mag have ended up with the bullets in the hide of the opposite shoulder. The penetration was enough to get the job done, but they did not pass through.

I've seen these animals take several shots through the shoulders before going down, but then again, I've had people tell me they got 1 shot kills on 'em.

The .338 should be great medicine.
 
LAST EDITED ON Apr-02-08 AT 12:16PM (MST)[p]I'll also recommend the .338. I've shot two oryx/gemsbok, and yes, they are tough. Mine were shot in Botswana and I took both of them with a .416. One was a hard quartering shot that entered in the left side behind the last rib and exited at the point of the right shoulder. That was with a 400 grain sledgehammer solid. When we got to the bull, he wasn't going anywhere, but he also wasn't dead yet.

Well placed shots with a quality bullet of reasonable weight will kill them pretty efficiently. Personally, if you have something at least .30 caliber, I'd stick with that. They will weigh about 400 pounds and make an incredibly beautiful mount.

One thing I'd recommend is to look at as many oryx as you can before you go. Look at photos, mounts, anything you can. Once you get there, I would suggest you look at a few bunches before you shoot an animal. I've seen quite a few mounts of New Mexico oryx, and most of them had horns 36" or less. Fully mature bulls will run 38-40+ inches and fully mature cows will commonly go 40-44+ inches. Take your time, savor the hunt and look at more than a few before you kill one. Chances are you'll get a bigger gemsbok if you do it that way.

By the way, they are fantastic meat if properly shot and taken care of. FINALLY: WATCH OUT FOR THE HORSN IF THEY'RE NOT DEAD. THEY CAN KILL YOU WITH THEIR HORNS IF YOU GET CARELESS!
 

New Mexico Guides & Outfitters

H & A Outfitters

Private and public land hunts since 1992 for elk, mule deer, sheep, pronghorn, black Bear & lion hunts.

505 Outfitters

Public and private land big game hunts. Rifle, muzzleloader and archery hunts available. Free Draw Application Service!

Sierra Blanca Outfitters

Offering a wide array of hunt opportunities and putting clients in prime position to bag a trophy.

Urge 2 Hunt

Hunts in New Mexico on private ranches and remote public land in the top units. Elk vouchers available.

Mangas Outfitters

Landowner tags available! Hunt big bulls and bucks. Any season and multiple hunt units to choose from.

Back
Top Bottom