The deer had been on the market. The crisp tracks within the snow made that clear. Three hours into our hunt via the frigid New Hampshire woods, Ryan Calsbeek, a rangy 51-year-old biology professor at Dartmouth, guessed that 200 animals had been hiding within the timber round us. Calsbeek and I had been 20 toes up a pignut hickory, crouching on a creaky platform. His pal Max Overstrom-Coleman, a stocky 46-year-old bar proprietor from Vermont, had climbed a distant tree and strung himself up by a harness, readying his crossbow and swaying within the wind. Shivering in camo jackets and neon-orange beanies, we peered into the darkening forest, daring it to maneuver.
I had joined Calsbeek’s December hunt to attempt to get my arms on high-quality pink meat. Calsbeek had but to kill a deer that season, however in earlier years, he informed me, a single animal saved his household of 4 properly fed via the winter. His younger daughters particularly favored to eat deer coronary heart; apparently, it’s marvelously wealthy and tender. My mouth watered on the thought. The final time I’d tasted venison was greater than a decade in the past at a elaborate restaurant in Toronto, the place it was served as carpaccio, drizzled in oil and so contemporary that it could as properly have pranced out of the woods and onto my plate.
A bounty of such succulent, free-range meat is presently operating via America’s backyards. The continental United States is dwelling to some 30 million white-tailed deer, and in lots of areas, their numbers are rising too quickly for consolation. Every year, a white-tailed doe can sometimes beginning as much as three fawns, which themselves can reproduce as quickly as six months later.
Wherever deer are overabundant, they’re at greatest a nuisance and at worst a plague. They trample gardens, destroy farmland, carry ticks that unfold Lyme illness, and disrupt forest ecosystems, permitting invasive species to unfold. They’re concerned in tens of hundreds of automobile crashes every year in New York and New Jersey, the place state wildlife departments have inspired hunters to reap extra deer. In particularly populated areas, wildlife businesses rent sharpshooters to cull the animals. Final 12 months, New Hampshire legislators expanded the deer-hunting season in an try and preserve the inhabitants beneath management. By the seems of the forest ground, which was pitted with hoof marks and scattered with marble-shaped droppings, that effort was falling quick.
Over the previous decade, some states have proposed a easy, if controversial, technique for bringing deer beneath management: Couldn’t folks like me—who don’t hunt however aren’t against it—eat extra venison?
Venison will not be a staple of American delicacies, but it surely has a spot in many individuals’s diets. Well being influencers laud it as a lean, low-calorie, nutrient-dense supply of protein. Venison jerky sticks are offered at big-box shops and marketed as snacks for folks on Whole30 and keto diets. Increased-end grocery shops, reminiscent of Wegmans and Entire Meals, promote floor venison for upwards of $12 a pound, roughly twice the price of floor beef.
A part of the explanation venison is so costly is that the majority of it isn’t homegrown. It’s principally imported from New Zealand, which has despatched greater than 5 million kilos of the stuff to the U.S. yearly since 2020. Beef, the dominant pink meat within the States, has traditionally been extra inexpensive. However beef costs jumped practically 15 p.c in 2025, and the standard type offered in most supermarkets comes from cattle raised in abysmal circumstances. If high-quality venison had been cheaper and extra extensively obtainable, it could possibly be an appetizing different.
In recent times, just a few deer-swamped states, together with New Jersey and Maryland, have tried to legalize the sale of hunted venison, which might ship two key advantages: extra deer out of the ecosystem and extra venison on folks’s plates. Regardless of the game’s affiliation with trophies, many deer hunters are motivated by the prospect of acquiring meat, and so they can solely eat a lot. “It’s on your personal desk,” Overstrom-Coleman mentioned as he fastened climbing sticks onto a tree to type a makeshift ladder. He had already stocked his freezer filled with venison this season (“That son of a bitch,” Calsbeek whispered, as soon as we’d left our companion in his tree) and deliberate, as many hunters do, to donate any extra meat to a meals financial institution.
Looking is waning in reputation, partially as a result of youthful persons are much less eager on taking part than older generations. Efforts to herald extra hunters, reminiscent of applications to coach ladies and youth in out of doors expertise, are beneath means in lots of states. Girls are the fastest-growing demographic, and so they take part largely to accumulate meals, Moira Tidball, the manager director on the Cornell Cooperative Extension who leads searching lessons for ladies, informed me. Nonetheless, curiosity is just not rising quick sufficient for the subsistence-and-donation system to maintain deer numbers in verify.
It’s onerous to think about a greater incentive for deer searching than permitting hunters to promote their venison to shops and eating places. However the concept is antithetical to a core tenet of American conservation. For greater than 100 years, the nation’s wild recreation has flourished beneath the safety of hunters and their allies, steadfast of their perception that the nation’s animals will not be on the market.
The final time this many white-tailed deer roamed America’s woodlands, the nation didn’t but exist. To the English colonists who arrived within the New World, the deer bounding merrily via the forests might as properly have been leaping luggage of money. Again dwelling, deer belonged to the Crown, and as such, could possibly be hunted solely by the privileged few, Keith Tidball, a hunter and an environmental anthropologist at Cornell (and Moira’s partner), informed me. Within the colonies, they had been free for the taking.
Colonists based a strong trans-Atlantic commerce for deer cover, a very in style leather-based for making work boots and breeches, which drastically decreased the deer inhabitants. In Walden, Henry David Thoreau notes a person who preserved the horns “of the final deer that was killed on this neighborhood.” The animals had been already near disappearing from many areas at first of what ecologists have referred to as the “exploitation period” of white-tailed deer, beginning within the mid-Nineteenth century. Fifty years later, America was dwelling to roughly half 1,000,000 deer, down 99 p.c from precolonial days.
The commerce-driven decimation of the nation’s wildlife—not simply deer however birds, elk, bears, and lots of different animals—unsettled many People, particularly hunters. In 1900, Consultant John Lacey of Iowa, a hunter and shut pal of Theodore Roosevelt’s, launched a invoice to ban the trafficking of America’s wildlife. (As Roosevelt, who notoriously hunted to gather trophies, wrote in 1913, “If there’s to be any taking pictures there have to be one thing to shoot.”) The Lacey Act stays one of the crucial binding federal conservation legal guidelines in existence as we speak.
The legislation is partly contingent on state insurance policies, which make exceptions for sure species. Hunters in most states, for instance, can legally harvest and promote the pelts of fur-bearing species reminiscent of otters, raccoons, and coyotes. However makes an attempt to carve out related exceptions for hunted venison, together with the payments in Maryland and New Jersey, have failed. In 2022, the Mississippi lawyer common printed a press release that opened up the opportunity of legalizing the sale of hunted deer, upsetting fierce opposition from hunters and conservationists; as we speak, the choice stays open however has not led to any coverage modifications. Final 12 months, an Indiana state consultant launched a invoice that might enable the sale of hunted venison, however up to now it has gone nowhere.
The sensible motive such proposals preserve failing is that permitting the sale of hunted meat would require big investments in infrastructure. Programs to course of meat in keeping with state and federal legal guidelines must be developed, as would speedy testing for continual losing illness, an sickness akin to mad cow that would, theoretically, unfold to people who eat contaminated meat, although no instances have ever been reported. Such programs may, after all, be carried out. Hunted deer is offered in some widespread grocery shops in the UK, reminiscent of Waitrose and Aldi. (Notably, continual losing illness is just not a priority there.)
Though the sheer abundance of deer makes them simple to think about as steaks on legs, a number of consultants cautioned that some folks’s affection for the animals runs deep. Deer are cute; they’re docile; they’re Bambi. David Drake, a forestry and wildlife professor on the College of Wisconsin at Madison, likens them to America’s “sacred cow.” As Drake and a colleague have outlined in a paper proposing a mannequin for commercialized venison searching within the U.S., any trendy system could be basically totally different from the colonial-era method as a result of it might be regulated, principally by state wildlife businesses. However highly effective coalitions of hunters and conservationists stay each devoted to the notion that wild recreation shouldn’t be offered and fearful that historical past will repeat itself. Because the Congressional Sportsmen’s Basis, a nationwide searching affiliation, places it, “Any effort to recreate markets for recreation species represents a major menace to the way forward for our nation’s sportsmen-led conservation efforts.” A few of the fiercest pushback to the New Jersey legislation, Drake informed me, got here from the state wildlife company.
The solely U.S. state with a deer-related exception to the Lacey Act is Vermont. Throughout the open deer-hunting season (which spans roughly from fall to winter within the Northeast) and for 20 days afterward, Vermonters can legally promote any meat that they harvest. This coverage was launched in 1961, and but, “I’m not conscious of anybody who truly takes benefit of it,” Nick Fortin, a wildlife biologist at Vermont’s Fish and Wildlife Division, informed me. He added that the division, which manages the exasperated owners and destabilized forests that deer depart of their path, has been discussing how one can increase consciousness in regards to the legislation.
Even after I defined the 1961 legislation to a number of Vermont hunters, they had been hesitant to promote me any meat. Hunted meat is supposed to be shared freely, or at most bartered for different objects or goodwill, Greg Boglioli, a Vermont hunter and retailer proprietor, informed me. I met Boglioli on the rural dwelling of his pal Fred Waite, a lifelong hunter whose entrance room alone was adorned with 20 deer heads. I had hoped to purchase venison from Waite, however he insisted on sharing it free of charge. In spite of everything, he had loads. His pantry was full of mason jars of stewed venison in liver-colored brine. On a desk in the lounge was the scarlet torso of a deer that his son had unintentionally hit along with his truck the opposite day, half-thawed and ready to be cooked.
Throughout our hunt, I discovered Overstrom-Coleman to be extra open to the thought of promoting the venison he hunted. “I assume that might be a reasonably glorious option to share it,” he mentioned. Earlier within the season, he’d killed a deer in Vermont, and he was prepared to promote me among the meat the following day. No less than, I believed as I stared into the immobile woods, I’d be going dwelling with one thing.
By the point the solar went down, the one deer I’d seen was a teetering doe in a video that Overstrom-Coleman had taken from his tree and despatched to Calsbeek. “Too small to kill,” he texted; he’d meet us within the car parking zone. The air was glacial as Calsbeek and I trudged empty-handed towards the trailhead, hoofprints glinting mockingly within the gentle of our headlamps. From the trunk of the automobile, we took a comfort swig of Wild Turkey from a frosted bottle, and Overstrom-Coleman jogged my memory to go to the following day.
I discovered his chest freezer filled with paper-wrapped packages stamped with Deer 2025. He handed me three and refused to let me pay. Again dwelling just a few days later, I used one to make meatballs. Their sheer depth of taste—earthy and sturdy, with a touch of nuttiness—made me surprise why I bothered to eat farmed meat in any respect.