I am interested in the harvest info from his 6 or so camps...that was insightful over the past few falls. pure, unadulterated harvest data. pretty timely each week. Basically confirmed what I suspected, the camps that were in the areas hit with the terrible drought of 2017 had a tough go of it. What is there to know? It has been very wet, and quite cool...if that trend continues, there will be a lot of chick mortality. hens don't renest if they pull off even a partial hatch, so the weather over the period from around 6/1-6/20 is pretty critical...I believe the peak of the hatch is around 6/8. His report that he wrote on his site was somewhat helpful...nothing profound, but I talk to farmers in the areas I hunt often...weekly...about 5 farmers, give or take, and I get out there a fair amount. Was out there 4/25 when I picked up a pup. Will be back in the next few weeks. There is great weather data to be had on the internet...that is 99% of the info I want. By the way, there is a link to his site on the homepage of this website, along with a bunch of other pay to hunt operations. I think I did the math from his site last fall, and the average # of birds bagged per hunter across the whole fall of 2018 across all 6 of his camps was around 2 birds per day per hunter...may have been a smidge under that, but close to 2. The average cost of his hunts are about $1200 per hunter...you get 4 nights of lodging, and 3 days of hunting. Some of the early hunts are more like 1300, maybe higher, and some of the late hunts are more like 1000-1100. The camps that did the best last year, and maybe the year before, were the camps in NW SD...Lemmon, Timber Lake...he may have added another camp up there this season. Generally good areas, and there are grouse up there as well...many, including me, found his gamesmanship unacceptable...some guys defended him...whatever...I have always said that he has done way more for pheasants in SD than I have, and he has an interesting business that I hope succeeds...doubt I will ever be a customer of his, as I have my own ground out there, and plenty of time to do my own scouting which I enjoy doing...plus, in most years, a few guys with decent dogs can usually shoot their birds each day if they put in 2-4 hours of hard, smart hunting. But if I didn't have the time to scout and didn't know the state fairly well, I would look at an outfit like UGUIDE's.