In the world of big game hunting and wildlife conservation, few objects command as much reverence, controversy, and sheer awe as the Jacques Palais Big Horn . This is not merely a set of sheep horns mounted on a plaque; it is a totem of a bygone era, a record-shattering biological marvel, and a collection of mysteries that has baffled taxonomists, historians, and hunters for over half a century.
For conservationists, it is a cautionary tale. The desire to possess a "Palais-class" ram led to the decimation of argali populations in the mid-20th century. Today, hunting of Altai argali is strictly regulated via international auctions organized by the convention. A legal hunt for an Altai ram today costs upwards of $120,000, with 90% of that fee going directly back into anti-poaching patrols and local herder compensation. jacques palais big horn
Palais, accompanied by a small team of Mongolian guides and a single Russian translator, spent 21 days at altitudes exceeding 14,000 feet. The objective was the Altai argali ( Ovis ammon ammon ), a subspecies known for the thickest, heaviest horns in the entire sheep family. In the world of big game hunting and
For traditional hunters, it represents the final frontier—a time when a man could walk into the Asiatic wilderness and return with a ram of prehistoric proportions. It is the inspiration for every modern sheep hunter who treks the Kyrgyzstan mountains hoping to find a "shadow" of that beast. The desire to possess a "Palais-class" ram led