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Game Management Unit 46A

Updated April 2009

 
Additional Hunting Unit Report pages
- Region I - Pinetop
- Region IV - Yuma
- Region II - Flagstaff
- Region V - Tucson
- Region III - Kingman
- Region VI - Mesa
 
46A Map
Species within this unit: Bighorn Sheep
 
Unit Boundaries
That portion of the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge east of the Yuma-Pima County line.
 
Species Information back to top
Bighorn Sheep

Overview: Desert Bighorn Sheep can be found throughout the Aqua Dulces, Growlers, Childs, and Granite Mountains. Past rams harvested have scored 145-180+.  Contact the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, CPNWR, for specific information pertaining to the refuge at (520) 387-6483.  The current CPNWR representative is Margot Bissel.

A strategy for your hunt, round up friends prior to scout out the unit. The more eyes helping you look will increase your odds in finding them. A great time to carry a camera or video camera. By late November, you should have a good feel where to start your hunt. Hopefully you have in your mind the ram you plan to harvest from your earlier scouting effort.


I recommend hunters scout early, to allow themselves plenty of time to explore all areas and especially see as many sheep as possible. In late August and into September the rams are in the rut; excellent opportunity to observe several rams. Keep in mind that the temperatures could range over 100 degree Fahrenheit. Remember to stay hydrated, please use common sense and be prepared for desert survival. The rams you may have observed in September will not necessarily be there in December. Mature rams have been known to roam in small bachelor groups or be solitaire; do not over look adjacent small hills to a large mountain as your hunt approaches. The Department completes sheep surveys by October; I recommend you call me or the regional office for insight into completed surveys. Note, not all units are surveyed each year.  


In locating sheep, I prefer to observe with an at least a 10 or 20 power binocular/scope first from the base of the mountain. This allows sheep plenty of escape room and sheep that are there may stay and watch you. Otherwise, a direct assault on the mountain will more likely send sheep fleeing before you see them. As curious as sheep are, they may watch you approach with out running. Make an indirect approach, as if you're searching for your keys (avoid eye contact), you'll surprise yourself how close you may get. Practice this technique during your scouting effort. When you are on the mountain, stay with in the first two-thirds of the way up the mountain; the third above you will still provide sheep escape room. Regularly stop and sit and listen as you use your binoculars. Chances are you'll hear sheep before you see them, as rocks fall from the sheep's movements.

If drawn, guides and taxidermist will find you. I recommend you attend the October sheep clinic held each year in Phoenix, sponsored by Arizona Desert Bighorn Sheep Society, ADBSS. You can ask questions in person to wildlife biologists, wildlife managers and various government agencies that administer the land your hunt is on. If you’re not drawn, I encourage you to participate as a helper in a sheep hunt.

Areas: Contact the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge at 1611 N. Second Ave., Ajo, AZ 85321 (520) 387-6483. Ajo is located 40 miles south of Gila Bend on S.R. 85. The Refuge will provide you a welcome packet with the rules of the refuge. The conditions are extremely primitive and harsh. Four wheel drive is required on the Refuge. The refuge is primarily a wilderness area. A BMGR (Barry M. Goldwater Range) permit is required for access on to the Refuge, because of military over flights. The sheep from this area have a unique reputation for its red stained horns, as well as its horn size. This hunt is not for the meek and the weak.  UDA (undocumented aliens) and drug trafficking is a reality; hunters should use discretion and good judgment where to hunt and camp. In the past, hunters have used horses and mules to negotiate the terrain.
 
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