ANCHORAGE, Alaska - When a 300-pound yearling moose stumbled into Calvin Hay’s Hillside yard and died earlier this month, he called the Alaska Department of Fish and Game expecting the carcass would get hauled away.

Instead he found out he was on his own.
"I guess I assumed that they would come deal with it," he said. "I kind of joked around a little bit; I said, wait a minute, aren’t you the guys that say moose are, like, natural resources and they belong to all of us, but now that it’s dead it belongs to me?"

Turns out that’s about right. So Hay, 46, posted an ad for a "dead moose" on Craigslist, becoming at least the second person to do so in Anchorage this spring.

"You could use it for dog food, or stuff it and put it (in) your front yard, bear bait, whatever," says the ad. "If you live in the Lower 48, this might be your best opportunity to get a free Alaska moose. I don’t really care; I just want it out of my yard."
Within minutes, the responses began flooding in, he said. He got at least 50, including one poster who offered to take just a quarter: "I want it. But I can only take a haunch. I got only a small knife and a bicycle."

When moose die and their meat is deemed inedible - often because the cause of death is unknown - they become the responsibility of whoever owns the land they end up on, said Rick Sinnott, the Anchorage-area wildlife biologist for Fish and Game. When they die on public land, the responsible agency takes care of removing the carcass. On private land, it’s up to the owner.
Fish and Game gets about 20 calls each year from Anchorage residents who have had moose die in their yards, he said. (The city’s moose population fluctuates between as many as 1,000 in the winter to as few as 200 in the summer, according to Fish and Game.)
"It’s a real dilemma, and a moose is a big deal, but if a bird or a squirrel dies on your property, then people don’t usually expect Fish and Game to pick it up, and it’s the same idea," Sinnott said. "It’s just bigger and stinkier."
Sharon Baker, 49, figured that out when, in April, she had the misfortune of having a yearling moose wander into her yard and waste away for a few days before dying on her front lawn in a cul-de-sac off Boniface Parkway.

Baker said she called Fish and Game about the dying calf, and was told there was nothing the agency could do. She called back when the calf was dead, and was told biologists were looking for a trapper who might want moose meat as bait. When she didn’t hear back right away, she decided to pack the moose in snow, cover it with a tarp, and post an ad on Craigslist titled "dead moose needs removal."

"I just figured it would be a win-win. I wouldn’t have to take it to the landfill and someone else could utilize the moose. You know, it wouldn’t have died in vain," she said. "Rick (Sinnott) wasn’t that happy about it."
In the end, the department did line up a trapper to take the carcass, but by that time Baker had given it away, Sinnott said.
There are often problems with moose dying in people’s yards in the springtime, after struggling to get through the winter, Sinnott said.

"In spring, there’s always a few instances where a moose has died, it’s rotting, trapping season’s over, nobody wants the moose," he said. "Usually at that point, we just leave it up to the homeowner to deal with because we’re not equipped to move 20 dead moose a year out of yards."

While it’s understandable that people want to rid themselves of the carcasses, the trend of posting dead moose for removal on Craigslist is ill-advised, Sinnott said.


2008, Anchorage Daily News (Anchorage, Alaska).