COMPTON
- Arkansas’ eighth elk hunt will open Monday, Sept. 26, with four
fortunate hunters going after bull elk along the Buffalo River.
The limited
permit hunts are a major attraction for Arkansas outdoors enthusiasts,
with several thousand persons applying each year for one of 18 free
permits. Two others are issued through fund-raising activities of the
Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, which returns most of the money received
to Arkansas for elk habitat work.
In addition to
the four bull permit holders for the September hunt, 16 others will be
in the field in early December - 12 with cow elk permits, three with
bull permits and one, a youth, with an either-sex elk permit.
The four
September bull elk hunters are:
Wood and Short
received their permits through Elk Foundation auctions. Except for these
auctions, the elk hunts are limited to Arkansas residents.
The hunt is
scheduled Monday through Friday, Sept. 26-30. At the same time,
another hunt under a different format will be underway on private lands
in Boone, Newton and Carroll counties. This is designated Elk Zone A.
Hunters must have prior written permission from landowners and pay a $35
fee for a permit to hunt elk. This hunt will end when the quota of five
elk is reached.
Some
landowners and livestock raisers in Zone A consider the elk a nuisance
and a limited hunt was initiated in 1998 to control elk numbers.
Nuisance complaints have diminished considerably in this area since the
hunting program was implemented.
Although
limited in numbers and in their range, the Arkansas elk have become a
major wildlife success story. Elk inhabited the state in its early days
but disappeared in the 19th Century. A restoration program
was begun in 1981, led by the late Hilary Jones of Pruitt, (Newton
County), who was a member of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission at
the time. The work included importing 112 elk from Colorado and Nebraska
and releasing them on lands near the Buffalo National River.
The Arkansas
elk have gradually expanded in numbers, with the present population
about 400- 450 animals, according to Mike Cartwright, AGFC’s elk program
coordinator. The elk herd is officially named the Hilary Jones Elk Herd
in memory of the originator of the restoration program.
Arkansas’ elk
range from the headwaters of the Buffalo River down its corridor past
U.S. Highway 65 in Searcy County. Some are usually visible - and
photographable - along Arkansas Highway 43 in the Boxley Valley,
especially early in the morning and late in the evening. This viewing
area is closed elk hunting.