You’ll be in, on or around cliffs, ledges and rocky spires, living out of a backpack. Think ultralight everything—tent, sleeping bag, rifle, scope, underwear. The less weight you lug, the farther you go and longer you last, but don’t scrimp on boots. Get them with tall, stiff sides for ankle support and stiff, deeply lugged soles for clinging to rock. A small binocular will suffice for finding white goats, but back them up with a 20-60X spotting scope for judging horns. Differences between a big billy and a young one are slight.
Be prepared for rain and snow. You can hunt in September, but goats’ coats get thicker and longer later in the year. For a real trophy, try a late October or even a November hunt. The first half of October is usually a safe bet for thick coats without battling extreme cold and snow. Standard deer cartridges are fine, but use a stout bullet, either bonded, partition or monolithic. High muzzle velocity and high B.C. bullets minimize drop and wind drift. Steep shooting angles, both up and down, put shots high. Learn your ballistics or use a ballistic rangefinder with angle compensation.
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