Animal Advocates Watchdog

Next Kluane sheep hunt will be taking place in Kluane National Park
In Response To: Kluane First Nation ()

CBC has reported that the next Kluane sheep hunt will be taking place in Kluane National Park (see below).

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Winner pays $315K to hunt Kluane trophy sheep
(CBC News)

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2008/02/12/sheep-hunt.html

A would-be hunter has offered to pay a steep price for an opportunity to bag a trophy Dall sheep from the Yukon's Kluane National Park.

The hunter, whose identity was not released, bid a whopping $315,000 US Tuesday at an auction of sheep hunting tags and permits held by the Foundation for North American Wild Sheep at a hunting expo in Salt Lake City, Utah.

For the past 30 years, the Wyoming-based foundation has auctioned off wild sheep-hunting permits from the Yukon, Alberta and elsewhere in North America.

The Kluane First Nation, which has Kluane Dall sheep on its territory, offered one Dall's sheep hunting tag for auction as part of its land claim agreements.

It offers one tag every year as a once-in-a-lifetime chance for hunters with enough cash to bag the prized trophy sheep, which are protected by national park hunting restrictions.

The Foundation for North American Wild Sheep keeps about 10 per cent of the purchase price, while the rest goes back to the First Nation, foundation president Ray Lee told CBC News.

"When the tags are sold, [the] money goes back to the Kluane primarily for wildlife conservation and social development projects with the Kluane," Lee said Tuesday.

Nearly record-setting bid

The winning bid, at $315,000 US, is about the same price many suburban homes go for in Whitehorse.

A similar permit sold last year for $180,000 US. In 2006, an Alaskan man paid $160,000 US for the chance to shoot a sheep in the Kluane Game Sanctuary, in what was the first such hunt allowed in 50 years.

But while this year's price may seem like a record-breaker, Lee said it doesn't set an all-time high.

"The Kluane tag, at $315,000, is the third-highest bid ever," he said. "Certainly for the Yukon and certainly for the Kluane, it is [setting] new records."

The highest-ever bid for a sheep-hunting permit was $405,000 for an Alberta permit, Lee said. Alberta also claims the second highest price tag ever paid, at $330,000.

Messages In This Thread

More Yukon Quest media cheerleading *LINK*
Canada's Yukon: 'A cruel place for animals'
Kluane First Nation
Shame on people like Luke and the KFN for making blood money off animals whose heads...
As Vikings, the particular people from whom I descend, the pillaging and raping of other peoples was an activity...
Mr. Faires, your post is the first I have ever seen that makes sense
Kluane First Nation has the right to hunt and trap within Kluane National Park
I am finding it hard to reconcile subsistence hunting based on ancestry and tradition with the modern practice of big game outfitting
Next Kluane sheep hunt will be taking place in Kluane National Park

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