Report Date:
http://www.dfg.ca.gov/news/Question: Last year I drew an Area 6 antelope tag. While in camp I was talking with a fellow hunter who told me he drew a tag six years ago. He also told me he had a tag for this year and showed me an antelope he had shot that day. I told him I was surprised at his good luck in drawing so soon. He responded by saying he was just as surprised when he received a telephone call from the Department of Fish and Game (DFG) offering him an unclaimed tag. I am wondering what becomes of unclaimed tags. I heard that years ago there was a standby list for unclaimed tags, but thought that was done away with long ago.
Answer: Hunters who are drawn for an elk, antelope or sheep hunt must claim and pay for their tags shortly after the drawing. According to DFG Information Systems Analyst Tony Straw, in the big game drawing all non-winning applicants are ranked according to their preference points and the random number they received in the drawing. DFG notifies by mail a small set of the top ranked alternates for each hunt. If a tag is not claimed by the person who is drawn, then the tag will be offered to the first ranked alternate. If the first alternate does not want the tag, then it is offered to the next ranked alternate and so on, until the tag is claimed.
It sounds like the hunter you ran into last year was an alternate for the Zone 6 - Surprise Valley Hunt because one or more winners declined their tags. It is also likely he is mistaken on how long it has been since he was previously drawn. Alternates are selected based on preference points, so an alternate for this hunt would not have received a tag that recently. Rarely does a tag go unclaimed by any of the notified alternates. When this occurs, the tag will be offered to the next ranked alternate (DFG generally calls the customer in this case rather than sending a letter to expedite the process). If that person does not want the tag, this process is repeated until the tag is claimed.
Tags for the most sought-after hunts, such as a bull elk tag or a buck antelope tag are not usually declined. The most desirable hunts generally don't make it past the first alternate. Cow elk tags are much more likely to go beyond the first alternate. Some hunters may have second thoughts about burning points that took years to earn on a cow elk tag.