Number six on the list of top 10 feel good stories of 2023 is when a Mountain Home man won an elk permit for the 2023 elk hunting season.
The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission (AGFC) has awarded 21 permits to hunters to hunt elk on public land during two seasons this year. Winners were drawn during the Buffalo River Elk Festival, June 24, in Jasper.
AGFC Elk Program Coordinator Wes Wright states despite the 15-day application period, they received 7,953 applications, the highest number of applicants since 2007.
One of this year’s permit winners was Presley Melson of Mountain Home, where he was awarded one of twelve anterless elk permits.
This year’s seasons on elk zones 1-4 are Oct. 2-6 and Oct. 30-Nov. 3. The youth hunts are set for Oct. 7-8 and Oct. 28-29. Hunting on private land in Boone, Carroll, Madison, Newton and Searcy counties follows the same dates as the public hunts. Permission from a landowner is the first step in hunting on private land. Permits are sold only through the license feature on the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission website, and are added to a hunter’s existing license. This is a quota hunt, which means a hunter must call the AGFC Wildlife Hotline each day to check the zone quota status. Limit is one elk.
Additionally, deer hunters may take an elk (limit one, either sex) if it is encountered outside the five-county area listed above. The hunter must immediately report the harvest by calling 870-204-0576.
Visit www.agfc.com for more information on elk hunting in Arkansas.
This year’s public land elk permit winners were:
Either-sex elk permits
John Cox, Nashville; Shauna Harp, Bella Vista; Joel Howard, Benton; Edward Merritt, Ward; Johnathan Moreland, Dumas; and Ichiro Stewart, Glenwood.
Antlerless elk permits
Nicholas Brown, Bella Vista; Tyler Choate, Little Rock; Jamie Fooshee, Bee Branch; Timothy French, Manila; Timothy Hepler, Huntsville; Donnel Housley, Searcy; Aaron Marshall, Mena; John McCain, Springdale; Presley Melson, Mountain Home; Charles Prestridge, Oden; Christopher Stark, Rogers; and Gary White, Conway.
In addition to the 18 permits available through the online application system, attendees of the festival had the opportunity to apply in person for one of three public land hunting opportunities. Winners for these permits also had to be present at the drawing to win. Just over 600 people entered onsite. The winners of those permits were:
Jim Bowles, Knoxville; Louis Schluterman, Charleston; and David Hales, Conway.
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