Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Who is going to confiscate it? Are they stopping traffic at the state line? I have never seen it but I guess its possible.
No reason to bring the spine home. Quarter your animal and remove the brain, if you are worried about it, and you are fine.
YesBe going from Montana to Pa. But yes I was more concerned about the head. Spine will be staying in Montana. Good old pressure washer at the car wash to remove the brains?
Never seen one. Are they stopping every car and searching them? Or is it just a station on the side of the road you can drive past if you are feeling lucky?There are states that put up roadblocks on the highway during the season.
There is not a single state in the west that I know of that allows vertebrae/spine or brains to cross state lines into there state.I would check your state regs. The head and spine rules are based on CWD and they're different state to state. I would also confirm if transporting through a state applies versus where your meat and head end the trip.
In Oregon they have check stations and every one that is a hunter is required to stop, even if no animals.Never seen one. Are they stopping every car and searching them? Or is it just a station on the side of the road you can drive past if you are feeling lucky?
Boil it, I’ve seen a few confiscated.Be going from Montana to Pa. But yes I was more concerned about the head. Spine will be staying in Montana. Good old pressure washer at the car wash to remove the brains?
The detail is in the rules. In Washington you can't import a skull/antlers with any soft tissue whatsoever which means velvet is not ok. Otherwise, in Oregon, it just needs to have the brain and meat removed which means velvet is ok. If you've worked on a skull, the amount of work is different. Meat needs to be deboned in either state. I live in Oregon and go through Washington, so I found it helpful to look at both states regulations. In Washington, it's up to a $5000 citation if you break the CWD rules. Also, in Oregon, you only have to stop at a check station if you have a harvest.There is not a single state in the west that I know of that allows vertebrae/spine or brains to cross state lines into there state.
It came from the importation regulations Ca had. It may or may not be relevant depending on where you are, where you're comming from, and or, where you're going. It's just one possible item a person could get knocked for, or promote the notion that if it's not dry, all the matter might not be out of it. Sometimes going above and beyond pays off. However, when I came through the border, I was required to declare my game items. I can tell you 3 different guys went through every game item I had with a fine tooth comb. The only reason I got everything through was because I was meticulous and exceeded their expectations. The guys were very nice, but 1000% professional. They openly expressed that if the heads and hides were not completely dry, I would not have left with them. I simply view it as why take any unecessary risk.... I have never heard about drying anything and don't know where that idea comes from.
This is a pretty convenient resource. I wish I had known about this before I went through each state's regs individually last year. This squares with my own research, which was that I was basically fine to transport though the states I needed to and that I mostly needed to worry about following my home state's regs. If you plan a shoulder mount, as noted above, super easy, just cut the skull cap. If you want a euro, you'll need to get the brains out.Read the facts for yourself HERE. Part of the equation depends on the origin and final destination of the parts. Some states have exceptions for pass through. In general, it's a good idea to have the brain, spinal cord, lymph nodes and eyeballs removed before interstate transport, and know that some states don't even want you having "bones" or hides that have soft tissue on it. Like others, never heard of any state requiring skull or hides to be "dry".