He's dated on the cost of the Colorado OTC tag, it's $645 or 675 (can't remember which). Even my cheap a-- decided to spend some money. Now in fairness, I knew this hunt was coming and had been piecing together stuff spread over 3 years. We were coming from California, Texas (me), and Pennsylvania. California and I drove ourselves to Colorado. Pennsylvania cousin makes way more than the other two of us, he flew (I think his rifle/scope was worth more than the hunt expenses of me and California cousin combined...not kidding). I think I racked up about $325 in gas in the Honda Ridgeline. We each bought about $125 worth of food in one manner or another. We used an outfitter drop camp (tent and stove) for $75/night (so $25 for what ended up being 7 nights). Then we had the fees for horses. Call it effectively $250/horse (roundtrip)--4 ridden horses (wrangler's horse too)+2 pack horses for gear (we weeded down pretty good after watching the fiasco the Atlanta crew caused)+1 horse to bring my boned out elk down. Even though all they did was pack us in, and pack us out, we REALLY liked the wranglers and tipped them extremely well. I think AgLA06 will attest they were good guys.
Initially, our goal was to go all out cheap as we could get it. After my dad died in February, we were steadfast this hunt was going to happen. I had been researching 3 units very heavily for a couple years, included Unit 24. Turns out one of my co-workers had used this outfit several years before, and suggested I check them out. After talking with my cousins, it was a very reasonable cost to get us into an amazing wilderness area. In one week we saw a grand total of 3 orange dots, and they were a mile plus away. We saw elk everyday until we believe the winter migration forced them down (I'm a pretty decent tracker and sign specialist, and I mean they literally disappeared over night). I believe AgLA06 was still seeing them down in his area. I knew where the migration route was (about 3 miles sw of our camp), but I'm not going to lie, we were so physically beat from packing my elk back to camp, we didn't feel like making that particular hike.
I wouldn't trade that experience for anything right now. Now I am researching pronghorns for 2019 or 2020.