From road kill to the dinner table

Sgt. Rock

Full Access Member
HELENA, Mont. - Salvaging roadkill for the dinner table is not only legal starting this month in Montana, but state officials plan to let drivers who accidentally kill big game to simply print out permits at home that allow them to harvest the meat.

Later on, there will be an app for that.

The Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission is expected to approve regulations Thursday that allow people to go online for permits to salvage for food the animals they hit and kill within 24 hours of the fender-bender.

No need to present the carcass to a law-enforcement official in person within a day of a crash, as was originally planned. Now drivers will be able to apply at a website and print out permits from their own computers.

And a request for bids is being issued to develop a smartphone application for roadkill permits, said Ron Aasheim, spokesman for the Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks agency.

"With all the advances in technology, why not allow people to do that," he said.

Montana lawmakers earlier this year passed the bill allowing motorists to salvage deer, elk, moose and antelope struck by vehicles. Supporters who didn't want to see the meat go to waste won out over skeptics who wondered whether the meat would be safe for human consumption.

Other doubters stewed over whether drivers would intentionally gun their engines whenever they spotted an animal in the road.
 

cce1302

Full Access Member
The only question I have is why we have to notify the state that we're eating eat a dead animal at all.



#liberty
 

kwo51

Full Access Member
Hiaasen, Carl will tell you all about road kill!!!!!! He is one author I can not put down,And I hate to read!!!! State and fed have to have control!!!!!
 
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Sgt. Rock

Full Access Member
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"Hey who likes their deer grilled?".
 

Concealed 27

Full Access Member
Good for the state, in Alaska in you kill and don't harvest its a crime, that's why I don't hunt, I see no point in killing an animal just for the thrill, I would harvest the meat and put in large freezer for when it gets tight... some months I dont have enough food and i don't live in the country so i go to food pantry and they are very kind in helping me make it. Being a diabetic I have to eat at least 3 times a day and I just can't afford to do it sometimes so I appreciate the goodness of others to put a meal on my plate so i would eat a roadkill moose without thinking twice about it.....
Concealed 27
 

Concealed 27

Full Access Member
So you have not tried the new Swanson frozen armadillo dinners?

Have not seen those yet lol, I do due alot of frozen dinners though I will keep an eye out for it... could not be worse than some of the stuff I eat...lol
Concealed 27
 

SilvrSRT10

Super Moderator
So you have not tried the new Swanson frozen armadillo dinners?

It must be a regional thing. We don't have armadillos here so maybe that's why we can't get them. Now there are armadillos in Florida so they should have them there for you Concealed 27.

Swanson should have a road killed squirrel entree. They're all over the place.
 

Concealed 27

Full Access Member
:fishing1: I think I'd prefer fishing for my food, I live 5 minutes away from Tampa bay and can catch some huge catfish and beleive it or not I go tarpon fishing there in spawning season. But i release and don't eat them.....lol
Concealed 27
 

MrMarty51

Full Access Member
I have ate road kill venison. I wonder if it was considered poaching, seeing as how it was way many years afore any laws like this was passed.
Welp, I have an old beat Chevy K20 pickumup, grills missing, radiator already leaks, Now, to think of a elephant size grill guard, with mesh, so their feets Do`n fling in an bust My already leeeekin radiator. :beatdeadhorse5: :bowroflwerd6: :insane:
 

kwo51

Full Access Member
Dead skunk up the hill. Smells a little funny but it may cook out of him. Real awaking on my Harley when I drove by.
 

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