Males in nearly all species appear once a year, when the last female generation, the ovigerous generation, is fertilized, and a few large ova are produced to carry on the continuity of the species over the winter.
That must put you up there with 90% of the males.
A family or group of families had the same hunting-ground, which was seldom changed, and descended through the males.
I'm not going on blind dates or being hooked up with hairy alpha males.
In 1897 it numbered 9,291,090, of whom 4,886,230 were males and 4,404,867 were females.