My parents have a picture of me doing exactly that when i was a toddler!Congrats on all counts!
And that moose- you could toboggan on one of those things!
Haha, yeah the moose over there wee little things! I bet they eat just as well though!
Certainly do! The young ones are really tasty ?Haha, yeah the moose over there wee little things! I bet they eat just as well though!
Yeah, the little guys (spike forks) are quite tasty here as well, but it's pretty uncommon to come across one that's legal. And when you do, you only get 450 lbs of meat or so instead of 650 from a mature bull.Certainly do! The young ones are really tasty ?
I mostly hunt deer and boar though, the good moosehunts are way further north.
The typical Alaskan row of chest freezers in the garage. We have 3. And you are correct, only male moose have antlers, haha. The same cannot be said for caribou though! Or mountain goats, which are notoriously difficult to confirm as billies or nannies.The extent of my moose knowledge is that only the males have antlers. I learned that writing a children's book for my old employer who was doing a kids page for their web site. That one looks like a freezer or two full of meat. Do you rent a locker or have a row of freezers at home?
Interesting, what determines legality? Over here we get allotments of cow, bull and calf that are distributed over swaths of land. The precise population control is determined more locally.Yeah, the little guys (spike forks) are quite tasty here as well, but it's pretty uncommon to come across one that's legal. And when you do, you only get 450 lbs of meat or so instead of 650 from a mature bull.
No judgment here but I'm a bigger fan of a nice juicy cow than a tough old bull. I would be happy to change that preference with the right dinner experiences though.Yeah, the little guys (spike forks) are quite tasty here as well, but it's pretty uncommon to come across one that's legal. And when you do, you only get 450 lbs of meat or so instead of 650 from a mature bull.
Haha, I wish! Bulls are all you can get in most units with over the counter (free and available to everyone) tags. There are drawings for cow tags in many units but they draw at less than 1% most of the tags.No judgment here but I'm a bigger fan of a nice juicy cow than a tough old bull. I would be happy to change that preference with the right dinner experiences though.
It depends on the management unit, but the vast majority of them have essentially three types of legal bulls.Interesting, what determines legality? Over here we get allotments of cow, bull and calf that are distributed over swaths of land. The precise population control is determined more locally.
Most of us don’t use a lottery or tag method either. You can take any game in Alaska with over the counter tags.I'm really thankful we don't have to use the lottery or tag method. We just have an app. Funny though, you guys have way less hunters per square mile, with more game per square mile than us, and yet you guys are using what seems like a lot more conservancy.