Beaver Hunting with a Deer Rifle in the Ruby Mountains in Nevada?

AntelopeEater

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May 31, 2023
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If you want to make a joke go ahead, but I'm serious.

I drew a deer tag in the Rubies, I went to scout this past weekend, and I saw beaver ponds in Lamoille Canyon in that mountain range, and that got me curious about beaver hunting.

So I asked an AI chatbot about it, and the chatbot was telling me that it would be excellent idea to hunt beaver along with deer, and that beaver taste great and are an underrated delicacy.

Aside from "talking" to the chatbot about it, I did some research online and found out that since I don't want to sell fur, I don't need a trapping license, and the opening day for beaver season is the same as the opening day for my deer tag.

So now I'm tentatively thinking if I see any beaver while hunting deer this time around, I try to harvest one.

Anyone here did something like this before?

Is beaver actually good to eat? My limited understanding is that there are glands near the base of their tail that contain stinky oils so its important not to puncture those.

And do you think I can actually hunt beaver in Lamoille Canyon in early October or might there be too many hikers/campers who might freak out if they saw me carrying a dead beaver, etc.?
 
"The main thing is to keep the main thing the main thing"
— Stephen Covey
 
I bet its not bad - provided it doesnt smell funny.

I think a post beaver review and a username update (beavereater) are in order.
 
They stink and are tough to skin, never considered eating one.
 

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