Searching for trophy game animals using advanced photography equipment or even drones and then selling the locations could soon be illegal.
This practice, Game and Fish Wardens say isn’t fair for hunters, or their prey.
The premise is simple: go find a trophy animal and then get paid by someone who wants to know the location.
WGFD Chief Warden Brian Nesvik shared, “Folks are spending quite a bit of time scouting for big trophy class animals in remote areas, and then taking the locations of those animals and selling services to people, helping them to find those animals during the hunting season.”
“I think it’s a question of ethics, there’s a balance there. It brings into question fair chase but you know the advancements of technology has put us at this point,” commented, Joshua Coursey Muley Fanatic Foundation President.
This is especially true for trophy mule deer bucks, because they generally stay around the same area until migrating.
“It’s not always easy to find animals in those areas, but once you do find them, especially with mule deer they maintain a lot of fidelity to that area until they leave again to migrate back down to winter ranges,” said Coursey.
This problem has been brought to light in the past few years. The consensus, it is not fair and even unethical.
“Actually really in the last couple of years we’ve started to see more of these services advertised, and that’s primarily where I think most of the folks we heard from here today at the committee have become aware of this issue.”
“The chase or the stalk is the hunt; it’s not called killing or shooting, it’s called hunting! And I think when you alleviate that you’ve taken the sport and the recreational pursuit of hunting and it’s turned into something not what this hunting community cherishes.”
State Representative District #33, Jim Allen felt, “We thought by our vote that it was an unfair advantage given to some hunters and not others, and so we’ll see what the bill does when it gets to the budget session in February but right now we passed the bill out of committee that prohibits that practice.”
GPS advertisements can range from a few hundred dollars to almost two-thousand, depending on the trophy status of an animal.
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