Fly In Outpost Camp
Fly-In Remote Outposts/Wilderness Camps These type of trips are a step up from the do-it-yourself trip. You drive or fly commercial airline into Saskatchewan usually to Saskatoon, Regina or Prince Albert then catch a smaller regional or float plane to a remote camp. The good point about this is a specific area or set of lakes are chosen when you choose the camp to go to. The owner/outfitter will usually supply the basic equipment, gear and supplies saving you having to haul these into the province. Depending on the remoteness you will also have some type of base camp/cabin/tent to stay in and fish or hunt from. The bad point is you still have no guide, usually you are just dropped off at the base and you receive fly by’s or check ins by air or radio. You still do all the work of camp chores, cooking, clean up, rerieving and butchering/cleaning of your harvest. See Choose A Location and Find An Outpost Camp.
What is fly-in fishing or hunting?
Wilderness Camp: Some outfitters simply fly you in to a remote location and drop you off. There is no cabin or shelter, you pitch a tent and totally fend for yourself. This type of fly-in trip is obviously for experienced campers only. Sleeping in a tent is definitely roughing it. Setting up a warm dry and comfortable camp site is something that takes experience.
Outpost Camp: Some Outfitters fly you into a nice cozy cabin or lodge out in the middle of nowhere. These provide you with the luxurary of bed, refrigerator, freezer, stove, sink, shower, wood or porpane heat and often well worth the extra cost. Staying warm and dry allows for more time to hunt/fish as doing the camp duties cuts into your hunting or fishing time. Someone has to be camp cook and someone has to do the dishes and that someone is you.
You may also find that you do not save much money because you have to pack in more gear. Most outfitters will allow between 45 and 150 lbs per person in weight, this includes everything you bring. Any extra over this limit will be charged at an extra rate and have a penalty fee for every pound over limit. TIP: make sure to ask outfitters about weight allowance and penalty fees for gear coming in and for game coming out.
Almost all outfitters are going to require a deposit, after all they have only so much time and resources to use. They are allocated a certain number of game tags and if you book a hunt then cancel they loose revenue they could have gotten from another hunter. Or they may have turned away another hunter or group because you had booked already. Outfitters understand things come up and are willing to credit you if you give them a certain number of days warning so they can try to resell the hunt or fishing trip. This means you will be credited for another hunt date but you usually will not get your money back.
Fly-In Remote Outposts/Wilderness Camps usually include:
Air charter service via float plane
Fishing: Boat, motor, gas, life jackets, nets, paddles
Fly-in camp checks or Radio Checks
Maybe Wilderness Cabin or Walled Tent
Maybe solar power or generators
Maybe running hot and cold water depends on remoteness
Extras
Some provisions
Maybe Satellite phone rentals
What You Will/May have to bring:
Remember there is a weight restriction
Passport, camera, rain gear, perishable groceries, bedding & towels, personal fishing gear. For a bigger more define list see What To Bring section
Fly-in trip costs are a product of distance, not the quality of the hunting or fishing! Estimate the total cost of your fly-in vacation to driving costs, driving times. Check with the outfitter sometimes there is no savings advantage between the two but the time you spend doing other duties and the gear and supplies you have to pack in.

















