2011 Big Game Scoring Program Book Available
HARRISBURG, Pa., Aug. 4, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Copies of the 2011 Pennsylvania Big Game Records are available from the Pennsylvania Game Commission online at The Outdoor Shop, www.pgc.state.pa.us, or call 1-888-888-3459, or mail your remittance to: PA Game Commission, Dept. MS, 2001 Elmerton Ave., Harrisburg, PA 17110-9797. Over the counter sales cost $5, which includes sales tax; mailed copies are $6.25, which includes shipping and handling costs. For additional information, contact Pennsylvania Big Game Records Program Coordinator Bob D'Angelo at the Game Commission Harrisburg headquarters ([email protected]).
"Nearly 300 new entries are part of this edition of Pennsylvania Big Game Records," said D'Angelo. "Among the new submissions is the new number one for typical elk taken with a firearm, by Domenic Aversa Sr., of Woolrich, New Jersey. Aversa took the 7x7 elk with a spread of 52 inches, that measured 387 and seven-eights inches, in Elk County during the 2010 elk season.
"Also new to the list is the number four on the typical white-tailed deer taken with a firearm, by Jeff Sitlinger, of Peachtree City, Georgia. A Pennsylvania native, Sitlinger took the 13-point buck that scored 189-inches on Nov. 29, 2010, in Dauphin County, which is a new number four in that category."
For years, the Game Commission has been posting the most recent Big Game Records Scoring Program "record book" on the agency's website, and will continue to do so. But, in response to public requests, it is put into a bound booklet with annual updates.
Pennsylvania's Big Game Scoring Program is based on the Boone & Crockett Club's scoring program that was copyrighted by that organization in 1950. Established in 1887, by Theodore Roosevelt, the B&C Club was initially organized for the conservation of wildlife and natural resources on a national basis.
The Game Commission and the Pennsylvania Outdoor Writer's Association started Pennsylvania's Big Game Measuring Program in 1965 (although score sheets and listings in the record book go back as far as the early 1900s), to showcase the outstanding big game hunting opportunities available in this state.
Scoring and maintaining records of exceptional big game animals is important because it provides a means to compare the extraordinary whitetails, black bears and elk being taken in Pennsylvania and a starting point to sort out why an animal attained its exceptional size. Often these animals are the product of outstanding habitat and wildlife management practices. The Big Game Scoring Program also stresses hunter and conservation ethics, and is another tool that promotes recreational hunting and supports Pennsylvania's strong hunting heritage.
Pennsylvania Big Game Records contains a wealth of information, including the minimum scores required for each big game category, some Boone & Crockett Club and Pope & Young Club information, a few photos, but most importantly, the listings. In each big game category the entry is ranked, the hunter is listed, and the county, year taken and the score are listed. The record book is not only interesting, but it can be used as a tool to identify where the "big ones" are being taken.
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SOURCE Pennsylvania Game Commission
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