Guided Hunts Canada

For Kentucky hunters

Hunting in Canada from Kentucky

Kentucky built the East's great elk herd, then made hunting it a raffle.

Verified July 2026

Kentucky did something remarkable: it reintroduced elk in 1997 and built the biggest herd east of the Rockies, thousands of animals in the eastern coalfields. Then it made hunting them a raffle. Around 600 permits a year are drawn by pure random lottery from tens of thousands of applicants, with no points to build. Nonresidents can apply for a tag of around $380, but the odds are lightning-strike, and there is no wild moose in the state at all.

We run guided elk, moose and bighorn hunts in Alberta's Rockies on guaranteed outfitter allocations. No lottery, no raffle, no points. You book a date and you hunt. It is a one-stop from Louisville, Lexington or Cincinnati through Chicago or Toronto, our camp near Nordegg is about three and a half hours from the airport, and the tag comes with the hunt.

Hunting moose from Kentucky

There is no wild moose in Kentucky, so unlike your elk this is not even a raffle you can enter at home. The only path to a bull is north, and we make that a booking rather than a lottery.

Our Alberta moose is a horseback wilderness hunt. Bulls average better than fifty inches, we run one-on-one rut hunts, and the tag rides with the booking through our provincial allocation. It is $15,500 to $17,500 in USD plus 5% GST for ten days. See the moose hunt page and the moose cost guide.

Elk and bighorn: the raffle problem

Kentucky's elk restoration is a genuine success story, thousands of animals where there were none. But the hunt is a random draw with tens of thousands chasing a few hundred tags and no way to improve your odds year over year. You can apply for a lifetime and never draw. There is no bighorn sheep in the state.

In Alberta the tag comes with the hunt. Our elk rut hunt is $9,500 for ten days of bugling bulls or $7,500 for six days on the migration, on horseback and on a guaranteed allocation, no raffle. Bighorn is the continent's premier ram tag at $45,000 to $100,000, and every US state with bighorn makes it a jackpot or decades of points. Guaranteed-allocation bighorn does not exist in the Lower 48. See elk and bighorn sheep.

What we hunt in Alberta

Everything on this page runs out of one operation: our horseback backcountry camp in Alberta's Rockies near Nordegg, in country where motorized vehicles are prohibited and access is by horse and on foot. We hold provincial allocations for the species below, which is what lets us hand you a tag with the hunt instead of sending you into a draw.

  • Moose: premium mountain bulls averaging better than fifty inches, one-on-one, $15,500 to $17,500 in USD plus GST.
  • Elk: a $9,500 ten-day rut hunt for bugling bulls, or a $7,500 six-day migration hunt.
  • Bighorn sheep: the premier tag on the continent, $45,000 to $100,000, on a guaranteed allocation.
  • Mule and whitetail deer: the November rut, $6,500, 130 to 170 class.
  • Black bear: baited hunts, $2,500 to $5,000 CAD, the most affordable guided big game in Canada.
  • Wolf: a free add-on with any booked hunt, unlimited harvest, CITES permit to export.

Getting here from Kentucky

From Louisville, Lexington or Cincinnati it is a one-stop to Calgary through Chicago or Toronto. From the airport our camp near Nordegg is about three and a half hours by road, whether you land at Calgary or Edmonton.

The rifle paperwork is the same for every US hunter: the RCMP Non-Resident Firearm Declaration and a flat CAD $25 at the border for non-restricted rifles and shotguns. See bringing firearms into Canada.

What our hunts cost from Kentucky

Here is what our hunts cost from Kentucky, in plain USD. These are our own published rates, and the figure below is the guided hunt only. Licences and tags, Alberta's 5% GST, your airfare, tips for guides and camp staff, and any taxidermy or export sit on top of it. For the full stack on any species, follow the cost guides.

Our published Alberta hunt rates. Prices are in USD unless marked CAD and are the guided hunt only; Alberta's 5% GST, licences and tags, airfare, tips and any taxidermy or export are on top. Verified July 2026.
Our Alberta huntPriceLength
Elk, migration$7,500 USD6 days
Elk, rut$9,500 USD10 days
Mule or whitetail deer$6,500 USDNovember rut
Moose, rut one-on-one$15,500 - $17,500 USD + GST10 days
Bighorn sheep$45,000 - $100,000 USDBackcountry camps
Black bear$2,500 - $5,000 CADBaited
WolfFree add-onWith any booked hunt

For the full itemised breakdown by species, see the moose cost guide, the elk cost guide and the other cost guides.

Bringing your rifle across the border

This part is the same for every US hunter, whatever state you leave from. You fill out the RCMP Non-Resident Firearm Declaration, form 5589, pay a flat CAD $25 at the border, and have it witnessed by a border officer. That declaration acts as a temporary licence for the length of your trip and lets you buy ammunition here. It covers non-restricted rifles and shotguns, the sporting long guns you hunt with. Leave any handguns at home, and note the five-round magazine cap on semi-automatic centre-fire long guns.

We walk every hunter through the paperwork before you travel, so nothing at the border is a surprise. See bringing firearms into Canada for the full walkthrough, and do you need a guide in Canada for why the outfitter is the access, not an add-on.

Common questions

Q. Can I hunt elk in Kentucky as a nonresident?

Only by winning the raffle. Kentucky draws around 600 elk permits a year by pure random lottery from tens of thousands of applicants, with no points, and nonresidents face lightning-strike odds. Our Alberta elk hunts come with the tag through our allocation, no draw.

Q. Can I hunt moose in Kentucky?

No, there is no wild moose in Kentucky. Our Alberta moose hunts carry the tag through an outfitter allocation with no draw, so a bull is a booking away.

Q. Do I need a guide to hunt in Canada as a Kentucky resident?

Yes. In Alberta a non-resident hunts big game either with a licensed outfitter-guide or an unpaid resident hunter host, and as an American your tag comes through the outfitter's allocation rather than a draw. We hold the allocations for the species we hunt.

Q. How do I get from Kentucky to your Alberta hunts?

A one-stop from Louisville, Lexington or Cincinnati through Chicago or Toronto. From there our camp near Nordegg is about three and a half hours by road.

Keep reading

Plan your hunt

Ask us about an Alberta elk or moose hunt without the Kentucky raffle

Tell us what you are after. We reply within 1 to 2 business days with honest numbers, real dates and the outfitters we would send our own family to. It costs you nothing.

The hunts we currently place are with licensed outfitters in Alberta. If you are researching another province, we will tell you straight what Alberta offers for the same trip.