Yep!

As I mentioned earlier, predators are naturally much less common than prey. It's a simple biological principle. In good buffalo country you'll often see far more buffalo in a day than you'll see big bears in 10-day hunt.

The trick in either instance is seeing the right one--but the odds favor buffalo hunting, especially over interior grizzly hunting. I read somewhere that the average success rate on interior Alaskan grizzlies is about 50% (which matches my limited experience on two hunts), while in buffalo hunting it's close to 100%--and maybe over, since some places allow more than one to be taken. In fact, I don't know anybody who's gone buffalo hunting and not gotten a good bull.


“Montana seems to me to be what a small boy would think Texas is like from hearing Texans.”
John Steinbeck