BROPHY BROS. VENTURA
David Elliot, 37, first thought of shooting an elk to help feed family and friends back in
January when the United States reported its first novel coronavirus case.
An emergency manager at Holy Cross Hospital in Taos, New Mexico, Elliot had always
wanted to go big-game hunting and, with the pandemic spreading, there seemed no
better time to try to fill his freezer with free-range, super-lean meat. So for the first time
in his life, despite not owning a rifle or ever having hunted large animals, he put his
name in for New Mexico’s annual elk permit draw.
With some U.S. meat processors halting operations as workers fall ill, companies
warning of shortages, and people having more time on their hands and possibly less
money due to shutdowns and layoffs, Elliot is among a growing number of Americans
turning to hunting for food, according to state data and hunting groups.
“I understand some people might be driven by liking antlers or some sort of glory. I
don’t want to do that,” said Elliot, who was able to get a prized permit to shoot a female
elk in an area of Taos County where herds of the animal graze in vast plains studded
with extinct volcanoes.
Elliot plans to borrow a rifle and maybe even a horse to carry the elk back to his vehicle
after the hunt. “I want to make sure it’s a clean, humane shot, as much as possible, and
get a bunch of food.”
Then there is Nathanie Evans, a 38 year old middle-school teacher and town councilor,
who says he is hunting not just for food but to reconnect with himself at a time when he
is being asked to guide Taos’ response to the pandemic as well as teaching online
classes. “It’s been so important for me, being able to go out and kind of cleanse my
mental card and just go and be present, you really have to be present, and quiet and
listening.”
“Into the forest I go, to lose my mind and find my soul.”
~ John Muir
BROPHY BROS. VENTURA
Photo Credit Kcruts Photography
1559 SPINNAKER DR. VENTURA, CA 93001
805-639-0865
BROPHY BROS. VENTURA