|
Lease-Hunting Income - Press Release, 2001
News release
issued March 25, 2001, effective immediately. For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Lease-Hunting Income
ARDMORE -- Landowners often have
concerns regarding recreational leasing enterprises, most commonly lease-hunting
questions, including pricing recommendations. In 1999 Noble Foundation wildlife
and fisheries specialists contracted to manage a lease-hunting enterprise on
a 7,000-acre Love County property in an effort to gain additional local experience
with the subject.
"Although every ranchs
habitat, location, game harvest history, and lease restrictionsamong other
variablesare different, inferences to similar conditions elsewhere can
certainly be made from this project," explained Grant Huggins, a wildlife
and fisheries specialist with the Ardmore-based Noble Foundation.
No game-harvest history was available
for the ranch, and no wildlife habitat management was implemented.
"Our only input regarding livestock
management was the stocking rate. Harvest was limited to one buck per 350 acres
and one tom turkey per 700 acres. Turkey hunting was restricted to spring only.
The property was enrolled in the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservations
Deer Management Assistance Program (DMAP), which allows hunters to take a doe
on any day of every deer season (archery, muzzleloader, and rifle) and provides
for a check station on the ranch," Huggins stated.
"In 1999, several lease formats
were marketed, primarily through competitive bid, in the Sunday Oklahoman,
Dallas Morning News, and local papers. Total advertising cost less than
$250. These leases provided us with the following information," Huggins
said.
-
An opening-weekend, two-day,
rifle-season deer hunt with unlimited doe and one-buck harvest opportunity
was worth at least $200 per hunter. We conclude at least because
we cannot claim to have marketed to every interested hunter, and all our
available slots were taken at the $200 price.
-
A rifle season lease with a one-buck
limit and unlimited doe and feral hog harvest opportunity was worth at least
$600 per hunter.
-
An all-season deer lease with
a one-buck limit and unlimited doe and feral hog harvest opportunity was
worth at least $670 per hunter.
-
A spring turkey-season lease
including unlimited feral hog harvest was worth at least $200 per tom.
-
Bobwhite quail hunting had little
value at the population levels present.
-
Combined gross income from all
leases in 1999 was $11,440, or $1.63 per acre.
In 2000, the property was divided
into four tracts ranging from 1,200 to 2,600 acres, which were offered as three-year,
annually renewable, all-game leases from September through May. One tract was
leased from September through December and did not include any turkey hunting.
Ranch harvest limits were essentially unchanged from 1999 levels.
Campsites with electricity were available
on each lease, and no fishing was permitted. Advertising was placed in the Sunday
Oklahoman and local papers for $212.94, and competitive bids were taken.
Incomes received were $1.42, $2.00, $3.04, and $4.36 per acre for the four tracts.
In general, price was correlated with apparent habitat quality. Total gross
income was $16,934, or $2.42 per acre.
The Noble Foundations Oklahoma
Hunting Leases publication, which provides comprehensive management considerations
for hunting leases, can be obtained by calling Judy Vance in the Foundations
publications office at (580) 224-7502.
###
The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation,
headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit organization conducting agricultural,
forage biotechnological, and plant biology research; providing grants to numerous
non-profit charitable, educational and health organizations; and assisting farmers
and ranchers through educational and consultative agricultural programs.
To learn more, check out the Noble
Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
|