# Utah Shed Hunting Guide (2026) ## Regulations & Requirements ### Ethics Course (Jan 1 - May 31) - **Mandatory** free online course at [wildlife.utah.gov/antler-gathering.html](https://wildlife.utah.gov/antler-gathering.html) - 23 questions, all must be answered correctly - Certificate must be carried on your person (paper or Utah Hunting & Fishing app) - Must be renewed annually -- previous year certificates don't carry over - **After May 31**, no course or certificate is needed - ~20,000 people take the course each year ### No Hunting License Required - No permit needed for recreational gathering - **Commercial buyers** need a Certificate of Registration ($150, valid 365 days) ### Deadheads (Skull + Antlers Attached) - Do NOT disturb -- report via the DWR Deadhead Reporter app - DWR investigates and may authorize you to keep it ### Restricted Areas - **Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs):** Many closed seasonally (e.g., Timpanogos WMA closed Dec 1 - Apr 15). Check DWR website before entering any WMA - **National Parks:** All five Utah parks (Zion, Bryce, Arches, Canyonlands, Capitol Reef) -- no collection allowed - **National Monuments:** Most are closed to gathering - **Tribal Lands:** Off-limits without tribal authorization - **Private Land:** Written landowner permission required ### Penalties - Gathering without ethics cert (Jan-May): citation - Trespassing: Class B misdemeanor, fines up to ~$680, up to 6 months jail, loss of hunting privileges up to 3 years - Wildlife harassment: Class B misdemeanor, ~$683 fine - Illegally obtained antlers: $30/lb restitution value (HB 382, 2024) - Utah is in the Interstate Wildlife Violator Compact -- violations can affect privileges in other states ### Recent Changes (2024-2026) - **HB 382 (2024):** Extended ethics course window from Feb 1-Apr 15 to Jan 1-May 31; established $30/lb restitution; created COR requirement for commercial buyers - **Potential nonresident restriction:** DWR proposed May 1-Dec 31 season for nonresidents (Jan-Apr restricted). Final status still pending - **2026:** New course available, must be completed fresh --- ## When Antlers Drop ### Mule Deer - **Mid-February through March** - Weakened bucks from rut/winter drop earliest - Lower elevations (5,000-6,500 ft): dropping may begin late January - Higher-elevation migratory deer tend to drop slightly later ### Elk - **Late February through April**, some stragglers into May - Varies by age, health, and snow conditions - Heavy snow keeps elk on winter range at lower elevations (6,000-7,200 ft) - Early spring with green-up pushes elk higher -- sheds found from 7,000 to 11,000 ft - **Sweet spot for early season:** 6,000-7,200 ft on south-facing slopes ### Moose - **December through March** (earlier than elk) - Less commonly targeted; found in northern mountain ranges ### Key Principle Winter severity and spring timing dictate everything. Hard, late winters concentrate sheds on winter range at lower elevations. Early springs push animals up, spreading sheds across higher terrain. --- ## Top Utah Areas ### Elk - **Cache Unit (northern Utah):** Known for producing large elk bulls - **Book Cliffs:** Remote, wilderness-quality elk habitat; accessible by foot/horseback/ATV - **Manti Unit (central Utah):** Large elk herds, big bulls ### Mule Deer - **Henry Mountains:** Considered the premier mule deer unit in the nation - **Paunsaugunt:** Historic trophy mule deer unit - **Wasatch Front:** Tremendous mule deer habitat; rugged terrain reduces pressure ### General Public Land - BLM land and National Forest land are open to shed hunting (check for any temporary closures) - Use onX Maps or similar to verify property boundaries, WMA closures, and terrain features before heading out --- ## How to Find Sheds ### Terrain to Target **South-Facing Slopes** - Animals gravitate here for solar warmth in winter - Snow melts first, exposing food earlier - Sagebrush-covered south-facing hillsides for deer; south-facing fingers and benches for elk **Feeding Areas** - Winter food sources concentrate animals: alfalfa fields, crop stubble, south-slope browse - Agricultural edges and hay meadows adjacent to winter range **Bedding Areas** - Thick cover, tall grasses, brushy thickets, timber pockets - Look for matted-down vegetation, oval depressions, concentrated droppings - Antlers often pop off when animals stand from beds **Travel Corridors** - Trails connecting bedding to feeding areas - Fence crossings and creek crossings -- the jolt of jumping knocks antlers loose - Saddles and passes between drainages funnel movement ### Search Techniques **Grid Walking** - Walk parallel lines 20-30 yards apart - Traverse a slope, drop 20-30 yards, walk back the other direction - Open country: widen to 50 yards. Thick cover: tighten to 15-20 yards **Speed and Focus** - Walk slower than you think necessary - Focus eyes in a 10-15 foot radius around you, not far ahead - Antlers blend perfectly into brown/gray winter foliage **The 80/20 Rule** - ~80% of sheds are in ~20% of the area - Focus hardest on beds, feeding areas, and corridors **Pro Tips** - Glass open hillsides with binoculars from high vantage points before walking them - Walk into the sun -- tine shadows catch your eye - After finding one antler, search a tight 100-200 yard circle for the match - Mark every find on GPS -- builds a heat map over years ### Reading Sign **Tracks:** Fresh = sharp edges. Old = dull, eroded. Heavy track density = animals spending time there. **Droppings:** Fresh = dark, moist, shiny. Old = dry, gray, crumbly. Clusters near beds = good shed zone. **Rubs:** Made in fall (pre-shed) but confirm buck activity in the area. Concentrations = heavily used territory. **Game Trails:** Well-beaten, fresh scat, clear of debris = active use. Follow between beds and food. **Beds:** Oval depressions with droppings and hair. Multiple beds = group site, search thoroughly. --- ## Antler Condition & What Color Tells You | Grade | Color | Age on Ground | Elk Price/lb | Deer Price/lb | |-------|-------|---------------|-------------|---------------| | A (Brown) | Rich brown | Weeks to months | $14-$16 | $10-$12 | | B (Hard White) | Bleached white | ~1 year | $6-$10 | $4-$8 | | C (Chalk) | Chalky, flaking | 2-3+ years | $2-$4 | $1-$3 | - **Brown antlers** = you're in the right area at the right time - **Only white/chalk** = area was productive in prior years, but you may be late or herd shifted - **Mix of brown + white** = reliable year-after-year drop zone - Matched sets command ~40% premium over single sides - Unique/trophy racks can sell individually for $100-$500+ ### Where to Sell - Antler buyers/brokers (AntlerBuyers.com, Petska Fur) - Online: eBay, Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist - Craft/decor market (chandeliers, knife handles, furniture) - Dog chew industry (growing market) - Flea markets, trade shows, sporting goods stores - Direct to craftspeople - **Peak selling season:** February through June --- ## Gear Checklist ### Essentials - [ ] Waterproof boots with ankle support (most important piece of gear) - [ ] GPS app (onX Maps recommended) with offline maps downloaded - [ ] Day pack (25-35L) or frame pack for backcountry - [ ] Binoculars (8x42 or 10x42) - [ ] Water and snacks - [ ] Extra layers - [ ] Sun protection (hat, sunscreen, sunglasses) ### Nice to Have - [ ] Trekking poles - [ ] Knife / multi-tool - [ ] First aid kit - [ ] Charged phone with ethics cert loaded --- ## Training a Shed Dog ### Best Breeds - Labrador Retrievers (dominant breed in NASHDA competitions) - German Shorthaired Pointers, Golden Retrievers, Weimaraners - Any dog with retrieving drive, good nose, and desire to please ### Training Progression **Phase 1 -- Introduction (8+ weeks old)** - Let puppy smell and mouth a shed antler (sand down sharp points) - Play fetch with training antler in the yard, short distances - Use a distinct command ("find the bone" / "find the shed") - Keep sessions short, end on a positive note **Phase 2 -- Scent Association (4-6 months)** - Apply antler scent to a training dummy - Hide the dummy out of sight, lead dog to general area - Shift the dog from eyes to nose - Reward heavily on find and retrieve **Phase 3 -- Field Progression** - Move to woods, fields, varied cover - Increase distance and difficulty gradually - Plant real antlers in realistic terrain - Practice in different weather and with distractions ### Key Principles - Patience and baby steps -- rushing creates negative associations - Short, frequent sessions beat long, infrequent ones - Praise is the primary motivator - Never start too hard; bad early experiences can ruin a shed dog --- ## Utah-Specific Advantages - No hard closed season like neighboring states (Wyoming restricts until May 1). Utah allows gathering as early as Jan 1 with the ethics course - Utah elk tend to be larger-bodied, producing heavier, more valuable sheds - Going earlier in the season (shorter grass) makes antlers more visible and gets you to winter range before animals move up - Tremendous diversity of terrain: desert lowlands, alpine basins, and everything between --- *Sources: Utah DWR (wildlife.utah.gov), KSL, Deseret News, Rokslide, MeatEater, onX Maps, KUIU, DogBone Hunter, AntlerBuyers.com, Petska Fur, HuntWise, Monster Muleys*