It's been going on since cave man days, when the main sport/occupation was hunter-gatherer. But it still took BYU athletic department officials by surprise this week when the big-ticket item at their giant auction was a nimrod package to go hunting.
Yeah, they threw all kinds of deals at a gathering of interested fans and general-public types. They were selling packages for road trips, sideline passes, golf with coaches, clubs, equipment, private coaching lessons and all kinds of gear.
But the big item was a hunting trip to Texas, courtesy of Ty Detmer. It includes a private jet flight to Corpus Christi and a ride to Detmer's 1,200-acre ranch. There you would have three days' accommodation and food with Detmer as the guide as you stalk and hunt all kinds of exotic and domestic game. Critters like dahl sheep, mouflon sheep, African oryx, feral pigs, wild boar, coyotes and bobcats.
The auctioneer got $16,000 for one Detmer hunt and $13,000 for another. On that night, Cougar Club fund-raisers received bids totaling $73,000 and more than a third of it came from the two gigs at former BYU quarterback Detmer's place a sort of get-a-way wilderness if you ignore the 8-foot chain link fence surrounding all 1,200 acres.
"I was surprised," senior associate athletic director Peter Pilling said.
"I didn't know the bid would go that high," athletic director Val Hale said.
"I knew it would go high," said head trainer George Curtis after working behind the scenes with Detmer and helping arrange for the private-jet ride.
As it turns out, this hunt thing is big.
I checked with some friends who live and die to hunt, and they concurred that hunts on private ranches could go that high, depending on the trophy game, company and client. The price can climb even higher if tied to a tax deduction and donation.
For instance, there is a permit that used to be called the Governor's Tag, now the statewide conservation permit, which goes to the highest bidder each year in Utah. The high-bid hunter can go to any hunting unit in the Beehive State and take a trophy buck. This special deal allows the hunter to harvest that prize beyond the usual 10- to 12-day window in the fall.
The high bid for this permit last year was more than $82,000 the same price as a building lot in Utah County. On top of that, the hunter could pay $10,000 more for a guide and another bounty for a finder. A finder is someone familiar with the movement of trophy animals. For a fee, he'll tell you where they're hiding.
- Vai's View: Vai's View: A return to church, a...
- BYU doesn't have a corner on avoiding Sabbath...
- Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones says she's a...
- High school sports: State tournament live...
- 5A high school baseball tournament live stream
- 4A high school baseball tournament live stream
- High school soccer: Mitch Parkinson chips in...
- All-time list of returned LDS missionaries in...
- Utah Utes QB situation gone from 'awful...
120 - Blue roundup: Philadelphia Inquirer...
62 - BYU doesn't have a corner on avoiding...
47 - Dick Harmon: BYU's Harvey Unga returns...
32 - Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones says she's a...
29 - Brad Rock: Rock on: Watch out, Bronco;...
27 - BYU football: BYU moves quickly in...
20 - Vai's View: Vai's View: A return to...
14






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments