Conservation

Where Hunting Happens, Conservation Happens™

Rocky Mountain Goat

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A Rocky Mountain goat from Alaska was recently entered into the Boone and Crockett Club Records, and it’s likely to be the biggest goat ever killed in the U.S. By PJ DelHomme Judd Manuel beat the odds long before he stepped off a boat onto the shores of southeast Alaska’s Cleveland Peninsula. His...
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Read the entire story of Kullusy's hunt in the summer issue of Fair Chase magazine. Not a member? Join today ​​​​​​​. A Special Judges Panel convened by the Boone and Crockett Club confirmed a new World’s Record Rocky Mountain goat. The Club announced the new record at the Wild Sheep Foundation’s...
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Rocky Mountain goats are tough animals, and hunting them is no walk in the park. Their horns are incredibly hard to judge in the field. To make matters worse, hunters need a keen eye to discern nannies from billies. They live in some of the most inaccessible terrain of any North American big game animal. Even if you see a great billy, you must know that you can recover it after the shot. Every year, determined hunters venture into goat country with a coveted tag—and each one of them has the adventure of a lifetime.
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The major features that make up a B&C score for a Rocky Mountain goat: C - Length of Horn and D - circumferences It would be hard not to classify any mature Rocky Mountain goat as a trophy considering all that goes into a successful hunt for these cliff dwellers. Nevertheless, as with all...
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A Special Judges Panel convened by the Boone and Crockett Club confirmed a new World’s Record Rocky Mountain goat. The Club announced the new record at the Wild Sheep Foundation’s 2023 Sheep Show in Reno, Nevada. Justin Kallusky’s British Columbia billy officially scores 60-4/8 points, eclipsing the previous World’s Record by three points. Each horn measures well over 12 inches.

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"The wildlife and its habitat cannot speak. So we must and we will."

-Theodore Roosevelt