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Jungle Adventure – Hunting Ocellated Turkeys in Mexico

Kurt Belding
|  
Location: Mexico

I started at Worldwide Trophy Adventures in November and five months later, I was hunting ocellated turkeys in the Mexican jungle. It’s the kind of experience that brought me to WTA. WTA is the mecca of the hunting world right now. Any super-cool trip, we are handling it. We’re smack dab in the middle of it.

I’ve been an entrepreneur for years. I had a hunting show and hunting brand, owned businesses in sports nutrition and fitness, and was an outfitter guiding elk hunters. I’ve hunted all across the United States and in Africa, Canada, and Mexico. When I hit 40 I sold all my businesses and sort of retired for a couple years to think about what I wanted to do next. Boom. I landed at WTA and began a new adventure.

Have I always wanted to hunt ocellated turkeys? Well, I wouldn’t say it was a childhood dream, but I’ve always been into turkey hunting. I have my Gould’s, Merriam’s, and Rio turkeys, so ocellated turkeys were on my list. They’re cool and super pretty.

Have I always wanted to hunt in a jungle? Not necessarily. The ocellated being in the jungle is the reason I went and I’m glad I did. It wasn’t what I pictured at all. I expected it to be wet and dark rainforest, but it was pretty dry, more like a dense forest than a rainforest. It was a great trip from start to finish, visiting that part of the world and seeing the culture of Campeche and the jungle.

I was the host on this WTA hunt so I traveled with my fellow turkey hunters and videographer, Ian Breland. We flew to Mexico City, spent the night, then flew to Campeche the next day.

In the morning in Campeche, we were picked up at our motel and we drove to a little village just outside the jungle, then we jumped into Jeeps for the 2 ½-hour ride through the jungle to camp. The camp was great, very comfortable and welcoming. We stayed in bungalows with concrete floors, thatched roofs, and fans that kept it cool for sleeping at night. And the food was amazing.

I speak just enough Spanish to get by, and some of the guides and staff were about the same with English. We communicated well with hand gestures, like playing Charades, and got along just fine.

These guys are absolutely dialed in on ocellated turkey hunting. They have it down to a science. They are very, very good at it.

When we got to camp, we took it easy and settled in. We unpacked, had dinner, and made a plan for the next day so we’d be ready to hunt early in the morning.

Days started early, like 3:00 or 3:30 a.m. We’d grab something light for breakfast, have coffee, then jump in a Jeep and try to catch the turkeys in their roosts. If we didn’t find them before daylight and they were out of the roost on the ground, we’d try calling them until about 9:00 or 10:00. There is also the option to sit by water holes and wait for them to come in to drink. Then we’d come back for lunch and rest a bit before heading back out around 3:00 in the afternoon to hunt until dark and try to roost them.

That’s basically the procedure. Roosting them at night is the traditional way of hunting ocellated turkeys in Mayan jungles. They don’t gobble, they sing. You listen for them to sing so you can locate the roost. Then you quietly clear a path to make sure you can sneak up to them early the next morning. You’re up very early, sneaking in the dark, no lights, very quiet, trying to get close. As soon as it gets light enough, you take the shot. That’s been the traditional Mayan way of hunting for hundreds of years. Calling them is difficult, because once they hit the canopy floor they don’t make any noise.

I say it’s difficult to call them in, but we did it on the first morning. We were filming and though Ian is experienced at videoing hunts, having a videographer along adds a wrinkle that makes hunting a little tougher. Sure enough, when the turkey came in to our calls, we didn’t get him on film so I didn’t take the shot. After that we struggled a bit, blowing some stalks, and having a hard time roosting them. But, spoiler alert, I got my turkey on the last morning.

As I walked up to my bird, I saw how beautiful it was. It’s hard to describe. They’re kind of ugly-beautiful. Their heads are blue with some orange and wart-like growths with bright iridescent colors in their feathers like a peacock. It’s something you should see for yourself. And when I grabbed him I saw his long spurs. They are relatively small turkeys, weighing only 10–12 pounds, but they have the longest spurs of any turkey. Just a gorgeous, gorgeous bird.

As you’d expect, the jungle is alive with other wildlife. I also shot a crested guan, a curassow, and a coatimundi. And we saw a bunch of monkeys, an anteater, and toucans.

In summary, this was a very cool hunt. Cool and different. It was tough for me to not be able to see a long distance, because I enjoy glassing while hunting. Visibility in the jungle is extremely limited. I did a bit of glassing, not so much to find turkeys, but to differentiate the sex of the birds. Everyone asks about the bugs in the jungle. There were a few ticks, fewer mosquitos than I expected, and not as many insects as I thought there would be overall.

What was really cool was finding Mayan ruins as we hunted in the jungle. There were quite a few old pyramids that have tumbled down. And we found some pottery that was somewhere around 1,800 years old. Besides shooting my ocellated turkey, the Mayan ruins rank up there as a highlight of the trip.

Hunting the jungle the traditional Mayan way was a great experience for me, and I’m glad I did it. If you’re looking for a unique adventure, I highly recommend it.

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Against the Odds: Drawing Back-to-Back Sheep and Goat Tags 

Drawing a sheep tag with 1-in-5,300 odds is amazing. Drawing a mountain goat tag the next year? That’s lottery luck. That’s why it didn’t seem real when my WTA consultant, Jordan Roche, called me two years in a row with that news!

I’d been working with Jordan at WTA TAGS for about five years, letting him manage my hunting applications in multiple states while I focused on staying in shape for whatever hunts might come through. When he called about the Tok Range Dall sheep tag (the only non-resident permit out of 10 total), I knew it was special.

After the excitement of drawing my tag settled in, it was time to find the right outfitter to make my hunt a success. WTA recommended one of their top partners for that area and handled every detail. My outfitter made it clear: this would be a backpack hunt in some of Alaska’s toughest sheep country. At 64, with two hip replacements, I can’t run anymore. But I can hike. So that’s how I prepared—I hiked mile after mile with a weighted pack, knowing the Tok doesn’t care about age or medical history.

We went in a day and a half before the season opened and spotted a band of 14 rams, including one heavy-horned giant that immediately caught our attention. Then Alaska did what Alaska does best. Weather rolled in, the rams vanished, and we spent the three days scouring valleys and ridges to find them again.

When we finally relocated them, we had to break camp and make a major move. After a full day’s work, we spotted six rams bedding down as evening fell. The next morning, we made our play.

The wind that day was unlike anything I’d ever experienced. It sounded like a freight train roaring up the mountain; gusting, dying, gusting again. At 320 yards, I had to time my shot during the lulls. My first shot went wide in the wind. The second shot dropped him—a beautiful 39″ ram. Honestly, I didn’t care about the number. That’s not why I hunt. I’m in it for the experience and a good animal. This ram was both.

The pack-out was its own adventure. We crossed the glacier-fed Tok River multiple times before Matt showed up with a Korean War-era military vehicle that could go just about anywhere. After nine days in the mountains, that slow, bumpy ride was a step up from travelling another 10 miles on foot. This was a trip I’ll never forget.

When Jordan called me in February 2025 to tell me I’d drawn a mountain goat tag, I actually laughed. “Figure out something for next year,” I told him, knowing the odds of a three-peat were one in a million. But first, it was time to prepare for my goat hunt.

I flew into Homer at the end of August, expecting to start hunting on Tuesday. By Monday evening, my outfitter, Paul, was warning me about the incoming weather. “We might not get you in until Friday,” he said. He wasn’t kidding. We sat through three days of howling wind, driving rain, and zero visibility before finally getting our chance.

Paul operates from a landing craft that serves as a mobile base camp. But getting from sea level to where the goats live? That was the hardest climb I’ve ever done, and I’ve completed five sheep hunts.

It was only 1,500 vertical feet, but every step came wrapped in devil’s club thorns, soaking brush, deadfall, and rain-slicked cliff bands. We hiked for what seemed like an eternity before stopping for the night to set up camp.

The next morning changed everything. Once above that coastal jungle, the alpine opened up to reveal why we’d suffered through that brutal climb. There were mountain goats everywhere. Good billies. The kind that makes you forget about devil’s club and exhaustion.

I took my billy on August 30, the first day of actual hunting after being sidelined due to weather. While packing him out, we witnessed something I’d never seen: ravens harassing a billy goat. They would swoop within inches of his head, and he’d swing his horns, trying to knock them away. Paul had told me about this strange relationship between ravens and goats, but seeing it firsthand was incredible.

The trip down gave us one more show. A black bear, fat from gorging on berries, army-crawled through the blueberry patches, entertained us from 400 yards away. I had a bear tag, but watching him was worth more than any trophy. Crossing salmon-choked streams on the way out completed the full Alaskan experience.

Both hunts worked because of solid preparation and connections with the right team. Jordan, my WTA consultant, had been helping me strategically build points and select units for years. When the draw results came through, WTA’s network meant proven outfitters were ready and handled every detail. They provided thorough gear lists, arranged logistics, and coordinated air charters. Everything was dialed in.

Some guys chase record books. Others chase hunting milestones. I finished my slam in 2019 with a desert ram, but what excites me most these days is the experience—the hunts that test you, humble you, and stay with you long after the pack is unloaded. When you work with the right people and put in the preparation, amazing things can happen. Jordan’s already working on my applications for 2026, so we’ll see what adventure comes through next.

Contact WTA TAGS to learn more about drawing the tags of your dreams: 1-800-755-8247

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South African Plains Game Safari: The Hunt

South African Plains Game Safari: The Hunt

South Africa’s southern tip offers a plains game safari that surprises even the most seasoned hunters with its challenge and variety. As a WTA consultant, I had the privilege of hosting this hunt, traveling alongside the group, sharing the hunt itself, and making sure every detail ran smoothly. By the end, hunters who started as strangers had bonded over long days in the bush and were already planning future trips together.

This hunt delivers true, high-value hunting in rugged, mountainous country. It’s not the type of safari where you ride around and shoot from a truck. Spot-and-stalk is the focus, often through thick brush and thorny cover, and shots can stretch past 200 yards off sticks. The ranch spans 80,000 acres and is home to more than 200,000 self-sustaining animals. You’ll see hundreds of game daily, with 10 to 15 species scattered across the property. Eastern Cape kudu, gemsbok, wildebeest, zebra, springbok, and impala to name just a few of the opportunities you’ll encounter, with plenty of surprises mixed in.

Days start early with breakfast at first light, followed by a drive into the bush with your professional hunter (PH) and tracker. From there, it’s boots on the ground—glassing ridges, stalking through thorn, and working into shooting range. Lunch might be back at the lodge or packed afield, depending on how far you’ve pushed into the property. Afternoons mirror the mornings, with hunting until dark. It’s real, engaging, and rewarding.

The camp itself is comfortable without losing its hunting-camp feel. Sixteen chalets, 8 of them newly built, offer clean and welcoming rooms. Evenings are spent around a central fire in the main lodge, with two game-based meals served nightly and fresh bread baked over the flames. It’s a simple but authentic setting, and every part of camp life is centered around the hunting experience.

Trophy care is well handled. Once an animal is down, your PH and tracker take care of the recovery and skinning. An on-site shed and cooler ensure nothing goes to waste. At the end of the hunt, an exporter meets you in camp to walk through options for dip-and-pack or full taxidermy. Everything is handled face-to-face, including shipping and paperwork, making the process straightforward and stress-free.

One of my favorite memories was an impromptu pistol competition with the local police captain and his deputies, friends of the outfitter. We shared plenty of laughs, a few friendly wagers, and even sent them home with meat in the back of their cruiser. That type of camaraderie and welcome isn’t something you find everywhere, and it speaks volumes about the atmosphere here.

The ranch is family-run, with owner Barry and his son Fred at the helm. Despite Barry’s paralysis from a plane accident years ago, he remains an ever-present storyteller and host, and Fred carries forward the day-to-day operations. Their passion and hospitality make the ranch feel like home.

The hunting in South Africa is unlike anything else in the world, and this safari’s mix of challenge, variety, and value makes it stand out. For hunters looking for a true plains game adventure in breathtaking mountain country, this is a trip that delivers.

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Wyoming’s Preference Point Deadline Is Approaching: October 31

Wyoming’s Preference Point Deadline Is Approaching: October 31

Preference Point Deadline: October 31, 2025

The deadline to purchase Wyoming preference points is October 31. If WTA is already managing your TAGS applications, you’re all set. If not, don’t miss the chance to secure points this year. It’s the perfect time to talk with a TAGS consultant to start a new portfolio or grow your existing one.

Wyoming’s system is unique. Unlike other states, you don’t automatically receive a preference point if you’re unsuccessful in the draw. Instead, you must log in after July 1 and purchase your points separately. Building points is critical if you want a shot at drawing a Wyoming tag. Over-the-counter opportunities are a thing of the past. Today, only 25% of non-resident tags are issued randomly. The other 75% go to applicants with the highest point totals.

If you want to hunt big game in Wyoming, building preference points isn’t optional…it’s essential.

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While preference points are an investment in the future, don’t let that keep you from starting now. While Wyoming has units that require 18+ points, there are also good opportunities to hunt sooner. There are elk, deer, and antelope hunts that can be drawn with 0–3 points. Think about it this way—the more points you have, the more options you have.

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