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Wyoming Deer and Pronghorn Apps Are Due

Photo Credit: NaturesCharm_Envato

 

Here’s What You Need to Know

Wyoming deer and pronghorn applications are due June 1st, and if you’ve been on the fence about whether to burn points or play it safe this year, here’s a quick rundown of what the landscape looks like heading into 2026.

Mule Deer

The deer situation in Wyoming is complicated, and that’s probably the most honest way to put it. The good news is real, though! The herds hit hardest by the 2022-2023 winter are rebounding, fawn production has been strong, and the bucks that survived that gut-punch are now 5 to 8 years old. If they’ve made it this far, they’re capable of doing something special this fall.

Region G is still the Region G conversation. The Wyoming Range herd has grown about 50% off its low point, but it’s sitting around 15,000 to 16,000 deer in a herd that should be pushing 40,000. The genetics and feed are still the best in the world. The roster just isn’t deep, and you need a specific plan to be successful there right now. The low population there makes it an especially tough pill to swallow when hunters are considering burning a decade of preference points on a General tag. 

Region H fared somewhat better with roughly a 30% population setback a few years ago, and quality in the older age class was standout last season. It doesn’t mean you will roll into H expecting more big deer everywhere, however. It has Wilderness issues for nonresidents, and there are pockets of H that are essentially void of bucks, even when populations are good. 

On the regulatory side, the antler point restrictions in most of Region G and all of Region H remained in place. The season did get extended, but only by two days rather than the bigger bump that was proposed. A few units also got shuffled between regions, so double-check where your target area lands before you build your application strategy.

Outside the mountain winter-kill zones, the low-elevation story is a different one. Drought and CWD have kept a lid on some of these herds, and a few areas in the Bighorn Basin and eastern Wyoming are a shell of what they used to be even 10 years ago. 

Other parts of Wyoming that were spared from major winterkill and have had less disease issues. A lot of these areas are showing steady increases year over year and should be enjoyable hunts this fall. Of course, it’s worth doing your homework before you commit points anywhere, especially this year, with such a hodgepodge of mule deer herd conditions in the Cowboy State.

Pronghorn

This might be the most optimistic Wyoming pronghorn outlook written in the Eastmans’ MRS in a few years, and that’s a relief. Three mild winters in a row, plus strong fawn production, have pushed biologists to propose quota increases in a bunch of hunt areas. Some of the biggest gains are in Carbon and Sweetwater counties, which is exactly where you want to see them.

The Sweetwater region took the hardest hit from the 2022-2023 winter and is still recovering, but three mild winters have done real work to get the herds back in the condition Wyoming hunters have come to know and love.

The Fremont County areas remain a solid public-land option for someone who wants a mature buck without waiting on a top-tier draw. And the Natrona units, which were largely spared the worst of the winterkill, are still drawing at moderate preference points with decent public land access.

With point creep, changes in season dates and quotas, it’s not all cut and dry, however. A savvy hunter wanting to make the most of their Wyoming draws really needs to dive into the details before submitting their application.

For the full breakdown on which units match your point level, trophy goals, and experience expectations, get into the Eastmans’ TagHub. Wyoming nonresident deer and pronghorn apps are due June 1st!.

 

About Jaden Bales

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