Hunting for your food

Hunting their own food might help meat-lovers feel better about what they are eating. (Adam Gilkey)

 <a rel="external ext-linked" target="_blank" href="http://www.facebook.com/HighCaliberOutdoors">High Caliber Outdoors</a> guests stay in a hand-crafted, all wood cabin built by owner Adam Gilkey and his staff. (Adam Gilkey)

The inside of the lodge at  <a rel="external ext-linked" target="_blank" href="http://www.facebook.com/HighCaliberOutdoors">High Caliber Outdoors</a>.  (Adam Gilkey)

Besides the fresh meat, guests also like to memorialize the rest of their hunt. Gilkey specializes in taxidermy: A duck typically runs for $250. (Adam Gilkey)

At <a rel="external ext-linked" target="_blank" href="http://www.facebook.com/HighCaliberOutdoors">High Caliber Outdoors</a>, guests can rise earlier to help set up decoys. The morning prize is a bite of Bradley-smoked fowl. (Adam Gilkey)

Duck and goose hunting start at sunrise, while handfishing catfish is an afternoon sport. (Adam Gilkey)

A mule deer, which is a type of antlered game. (Frontiers Travel)

Log cabin accommodations at Linehan Outfitting, deep in the forests of Northwest Montana.   (Fronteirs Travel)

The Pond House accommodations at High Lonesome Ranch.   (Frontiers Travel)