blueridge
Well-known member
Does anyone here have experience harvesting elk in any of New Mexico's CWD units? This year it is gmu's 19, 28, and 34. I've read the regulations/restrictions (pasted below), but am wondering about common practices. What are people doing?
It sounds like if you want to do your own Euro mount that you'd have to bring the equipment to boil and clean it before leaving the unit. Is that correct?
Has anyone submitted tissue samples for testing? If so, what is the turnaround time? Is this something you can wait a couple days for or do you find out weeks later?
Have there been any restrictions made by neighboring states pertaining to the crossing state lines with heads/spinal cords from animals harvested in non-CWD units?
Thanks!
It sounds like if you want to do your own Euro mount that you'd have to bring the equipment to boil and clean it before leaving the unit. Is that correct?
Has anyone submitted tissue samples for testing? If so, what is the turnaround time? Is this something you can wait a couple days for or do you find out weeks later?
Have there been any restrictions made by neighboring states pertaining to the crossing state lines with heads/spinal cords from animals harvested in non-CWD units?
Thanks!
Department rules allows hunters who take a deer or elk within a control area to transport only certain portions of the carcass outside the boundaries of the Game Management Unit from which it was taken. Those portions include:
Meat that is cut and wrapped, either commercially or privately.
Quarters or other portions of meat with no part of the spinal column or head attached.
Meat that has been boned out.
Hides with no heads attached.
Clean skull plates with antlers attached. Clean is defined as having been immersed in a bath of at least one part chlorine bleach and two parts water, with no meat or tissue attached.
Antlers, with or without velvet, attached to skull plate with no meat or tissue attached.
Upper canine teeth, also known as “buglers,” whistlers,” or “ivories.”
Finished taxidermied heads.