Pricing Exotics 

 

Pricing Exotics

Pricing Deer

Pricing Sheep/Ram

Pricing Birds
 

Rates are one hundred ($100.00) per day, per hunter.  Trophy fee for animals taken or wounded are extra.

Addax
The addax is gray-brown in winter and sandy to white in summer, with long, thin, spiral horns that slant back and upward. It stands about 1.1 m (3.5') at the shoulder and has large splayed hooves for walking in soft sand. It is the most desert-adapted of antelopes, being well adapted to heat, a diet of coarse grasses and the absence of water. It lives most of its life without drinking, deriving sufficient moisture from dew and the plants on which it feeds. The addax weighs up to 135 kg (300 lb). It is found in sandy and stony regions of the Sahara Desert, particularly dune regions. When grasses are absent, it browses acacia species and leguminous herbs. Because of the extreme aridity of its habitat, the addax moves over considerable distances in search of food. It is principally nocturnal and crepuscular and rests during the heat of the day. Currently it only occurs singly or in groups of up to 4.1

Trophy fee: $2500 and up

Black Buck Antelope

Black Buck

Trophy fee: $1250.00 and up

Male Black Buck Antelope have black fur on their upper parts and white fur on their chest, belly, the inner sides of their legs, and on their muzzle and chin. They have white rings around their eyes and they have long, ringed horns that spiral with three to four turns and are up to 28 inches long. The males are born light brown then turn black around three years of age. Males stand about 32 inches tall at the shoulders and weigh between 71 and 95 pounds. Female Black Buck Antelope are smaller, are beige or light brown and usually do not have horns, however, if they do, the horns are not ringed and spiraled as the males are. Black Buck Antelope are the fastest animals on earth and can out run any other animal over long distances. They can run almost 50 miles per hour when necessary.4

Gemsbok
This is a powerful-looking antelope with a well-defined pattern on the head and body. On the face, there are three black stripes alternating with three white ones. There is a black stripe running down the center of the back. The white underside is separated from the gray flanks by a black line. The tail is long and has a black tuft. The horns are nearly straight and almost parallel, and average about 30 inches long. The female's horns are usually longer and slimmer. There are two distinct races of gemsbok: a northern form which often has its ears fringed in black, and a southern form with longer horns, rounder ears, and a darker rump. Length of head and body is up to six feet, shoulder height about 4 feet, and it weighs up to 450 pounds.7

Trophy fee: $2500.00 and up

Ibex

Trophy fee: $2500.00 and up

An ibex, also called steinbock, is a type of wild mountain goat with large recurved horns that are transversely ridged in front. Ibex are found in Eurasia and North Africa. Legend had it that the ibex's spine was rigid, so that the goat could not look back. If threatened from behind, it would jump off a precipice and land unharmed on its horns.

Scimitar Oryx

The scimitar-horned Oryx, named for its scimitar-shaped horns, weighs up to 220 kg (480 lb). The scimitar-horned Oryx inhabits the sub-desert lands - the transition zones between true desert (Sahara) and the Sahel, with a rainfall of between 75 and 150 mm (3 - 6"). It is found in rolling dunes, grassy steppes and wooded inter-dunal depressions. It very rarely penetrates either true desert or true Sahel country. The scimitar-horned Oryx selectively feeds on a variety of foods - primarily grasses, but also legumes and leaves and the fruit of trees and shrubs.  It is well adapted to arid lands, being able to go for 9 - 10 months without drinking water by utilizing the moisture in the vegetation it eats.1

Trophy fee: $2500.00 and up

Zebra

Trophy fee: $3000.00 and up

 
Zebras are members of the horse family native to central and southern Africa. All have vividly contrasting black and white vertical stripes (hence the zebra crossing named after it) on the forequarters, often tending towards the horizontal at the rear of the animal. Most zoologists believe the stripes act as a camouflage mechanism; although some believe it plays a role in their social interactions, acting as a means to distinguish an individual from all of the others in slight variations of the stripes.2

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1 Information obtained from http://www.animalinfo.org/

2 Information obtained from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

3 Information obtained from http://www.thebigzoo.com/

4 Picture obtained from http://www.haryana-online.com/

5 Picture courtesy of Venison Forum

6 Information obtained from http://www.nsrl.ttu.edu/tmot1/cervdama.htm

7 Information obtained from http://www.americazoo.com/

8 Information obtained from http://www.wildturkeyzone.com/

9 Information obtained from http://www.oaklandzoo.org/