Hi all, I hope this community is not dead or the wrong place

I was watching Alone Season 7 Episode 6 on Netflix. The screenshot was taken roughly 40 mins in. One of the key moments is the contester shown in the picture killing a Musk Ox using bow and arrow. Later, when he hauls back his gain, I cannot help but notice there seems to be a plastic tag attached to this Ox leg. It very much looks like something they would use in a commercial butchery to keep track of their products.

Online I could find a lot of controversy about how the kill was made. People think how the show is cut, it leaves out key information or overplays some struggles. But the overall opinion seems that Alone is one of the only shows where competitors are truly on their own. I did not find a single discussion about that yellow plastic looking tag. What is this? And why is it on a leg of an animal supposedly killed in the wilds by a guy surviving on his own?

  • ToxicWasteOP
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    5 months ago

    Whenever they show someone killing an animal (usually fishing or smaller snares) they display a text saying something along these lines: all hunting follows local and native jurisdiction. The controversy was due to the kill being a single arrow to the hind leg. Bleeding the animal for about 5h. Afterwards it was finally killed by rushing it at least twice with a knife. So not something I would call a clean kill.

    Good point about having to register and tag the kill with the authorities. That would definitely explain the plastic on the carcass.

    • chgowiz@kbin.social
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      5 months ago

      For the US, every state has their own rules, as well as individual sites on what you can do, how you can do it. If you’re on a Federal site, usually it’s a mix of state rules and Federal rules.

      Part of the responsibility is to know those rules and follow them. Yea, it can get confusing and hard, but that’s part of the deal, so gotta be done. Much better to pick up the phone and call or shoot an email and ask questions, than to not and get a visit…

      In the US, conservation officers don’t mess around. They definitely can be on the unpleasant end of FAFO.