Facing meat shortages, some Americans turn to hunting during pandemic
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[May 04, 2020]
By Andrew Hay
TAOS, N.M. (Reuters) - David Elliot first
thought of shooting an elk to help feed family and friends back in
January when the United States reported its first novel coronavirus
case.
Elliot, emergency manager at Holy Cross Hospital in Taos, New Mexico,
had always wanted to go big-game hunting and, with the pandemic
spreading, there seemed no better time to try to fill his freezer with
free-range, super-lean meat.
So for the first time in his life, despite not owning a rifle or ever
having hunted large animals, he put his name in for New Mexico's annual
elk permit draw.
With some U.S. meat processors halting operations as workers fall ill,
companies warning of shortages, and people having more time on their
hands and possibly less money due to shutdowns and layoffs, he is among
a growing number of Americans turning to hunting for food, according to
state data and hunting groups.
"I understand some people might be driven by like antlers or some sort
of glory. I don't want to do that," said Elliot, 37, who received a
prized permit to shoot a female elk in an area of Taos County where
herds of the animal graze in vast plains studded with extinct volcanoes.
Elliot plans to borrow a rifle and maybe even a horse to carry the elk
back to his vehicle after the hunt in November. "I want to make sure
it's a clean, humane shot, as much as possible, and get a bunch of
food."
Game and fish agencies from Minnesota to New Mexico have reported an
increase in either hunting license sales, permit applications, or both
this spring.
Indiana saw a 28% jump in turkey license sales during the first week of
the season as hunters likely had more time to get out into the woods,
said Marty Benson, a spokesman for the state's Department of Natural
Resources.
Firearm manufacturers have reported sales increases, and the FBI carried
out 3.74 million background checks in March, a record for any month.
That followed a decline of 255,000 in the number of hunters between 2016
and 2020, based on U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service license data, a 2%
fall, as fewer young people took up the activity, hunting advocates say.
Hank Forester of Quality Deer Management Association expects a
resurgence after many Americans saw empty meat shelves at the grocery
store for the first time during March and April.
"People are starting to consider self-reliance and where their food
comes from," said Forester of the hunter research and training group.
"We're all born hunters."
'MENTAL CLEANSE'
Teachers Brian Van Nevel and Nathaniel Evans get up at 4 a.m. to try to
be first into the forests around Taos to hunt wild turkey.
Evans, a middle-school teacher, has seen a lot more people stalking
birds this year.
A town councilor as well, he is hunting not just for food but to
reconnect with himself at a time when he is guiding Taos' response to
the pandemic as well as teaching online classes.
"Its been so important for me, being able to go out and kind of cleanse
my mental card and just go and be present, you really have to be
present, and quiet and listening," said Evans, 38, who in April shot a
17-pound (7.7-kg) bird.
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Hunters Brian Van Nevel and Nathaniel Evans take picture together in
a national forest near Taos, New Mexico, U.S. April 16, 2020, where
they see larger numbers of turkey hunters this season as more people
go into the mountains to stalk the birds during the coronavirus
pandemic. Picture taken April 16, 2020. Nathaniel Evans/Handout via
REUTERS
Some states such as Washington and Illinois closed state lands as
the virus spread, prompting the National Rifle Association to lobby
governors to keep them open to allow people to hunt for food.
Officials in Washington issued 10 poaching charges between March 25
and April 26 compared with three in the year-earlier period, the
state's Fish and Wildlife Department reported.
'A GOOD IDEA'
Nina Stafford, 42, a building contractor from Fayetteville, Georgia,
killed her first deer in January. She described the experience as
"thrilling, exciting and remorseful for the deer."
"The coronavirus has only made me want to go and do it more so that
I don't have that scared feeling of where's my next meal going to
come from," said Stafford, who also grows vegetables and fruit.
To be sure, stocks of species like wild turkey can only sustain so
many hunters. Wildlife ecologists Michael Chamberlain and Brett
Collier fear the turkey's existing population decline will steepen
this spring.
Turkey hunter numbers in wildlife management areas in Georgia
increased 47% this year from 2019, while turkeys killed during the
first 23 days of the season rose 26%, despite no recent increase in
bird numbers, the ecologists, respectively with the University of
Georgia and Louisiana State University, wrote in a report, citing
state department of natural resources preliminary data.
Not all states have reported an increase in hunting license
applications, with both California and Florida seeing declines.
Still, big game such as deer could see similar pressure in the
autumn as hunters have more time to max out "bag limits," which in
the case of Georgia is 12 animals, the ecologists said.
Elk hunts in most states are limited to a single animal per hunter
who draws a permit in an annual lottery. Elliot sees no downside to
paying $60 for a tag that could allow him to get close to 200 pounds
(91 kg) of meat, if he can get a cow elk.
"It's not just because what's going on in the world right now.
Frankly I don't make that much money, so like this is just a good
idea anyway," said Elliot.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Bill
Tarrant, Daniel Wallis and Peter Cooney)
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