Pennsylvania’s recent shift of deer season’s start date wasn’t universally loved, but the deer harvest has continued to grow since 2015.

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The Pennsylvania Game Commission upset a number of hunters in 2019 when it voted to move the start of deer season to the Saturday after Thanksgiving rather than the Monday after Thanksgiving. Hunters have adjusted, however.
About 435,000 deer were harvested in the 2020-21 season, compared to 375,000 in 2018-29 and 316,000 in 2015-16, according to the PGC’s 2021 annual report.
“By moving the opening day to Saturday, a weekend day when fewer people are working or going to school and more people have off, hunting on the opening day became a reality for hunters who otherwise would have been shut out,” said PGC Spokesman Travis Lau.
A survey conducted on behalf of the PGC of hunters in December 2021 found more support than opposition to the start date change.
“A majority of Pennsylvania deer hunters (60%) strongly or moderately support having opening day of the regular firearms deer season on the Saturday after Thanksgiving, compared to 27% who strongly or moderately oppose it,” the survey found.
The results, though, varied by age. “Opposition is higher among hunters 55 and older, compared to their younger counterparts,” the survey noted, and hunters who have a child that hunts had “markedly higher” support for the change.
Tradition was the leading reason for opposing the change.
Regardless, it wasn’t enough to turn away hunters. “A majority of hunters (62%) said that the Saturday opening has not had an impact on their deer hunting in Pennsylvania,” the survey noted. “Meanwhile, more hunters said it has had a positive impact (25%) than a negative impact (11%).”
At the time of the change in 2019, media described the move as an attempt at “creating additional opportunities to recruit and retain hunters.”
Not all sportsmen have let go of a bad feeling over the change, though.
“From what we’ve been seeing as an organization and some of the feedback from our own membership, there’s still quite a bit of mixed feeling about it,” said Lowell Graybill, past president of the Pennsylvania Federation of Sportsmen and Conservationists.
Part of the opposition came from the difficulty in saying whether the change achieved a stated objective of pulling in more hunters, or getting young people involved.
“I wouldn’t doubt that that’s given opportunity for a few more people to engage, whether youth or adult, but we have no conclusive records or numbers to indicate that that’s actually true,” Graybill said. “I don’t know if that’s happened, it might be too soon to tell whether we see more specific polling or response from the game commission to know, really, was it successful?”
He also noted a deeper problem of undermining tradition and hunting culture. Without those connections and practices in place, it’s harder to keep young people engaged, or draw in adults who don’t come from hunting families.
Perhaps the hunting day changes might help, but a bigger issue is at stake.
“Is it really gonna grow passion for it, or is it going to be opportunistic?” Graybill asked. “A lot of our youth today find a lot of other opportunities in a lot of other places, much of which requires minimal commitment.”
Making hunting more convenient doesn’t pass along the importance of hunting like a family connection and keeping tradition alive. Grandparents telling grandkids hunting stories, Graybill said, is important.
“That all had to do with an interest that was generated by associating with, and by being with others who were excited about it — particularly family,” Graybill said.
“Hearing the memories, seeing the pictures, being excited about what’s yet to come…that’s all part of feeding off a tradition. I struggle with that part of the hunting community that’s so quick to lay down the aspect of tradition,” he said.
Though preserving tradition is a bigger challenge, the start date shift has at least some early data that looks promising. While general hunting licenses have dropped from 644,000 in 2011 to 550,000 in 2021 and have trended downward, resident antlerless deer licenses have gone up to 897,000 in 2021 from 843,000 in 2011, and increased overall since 2015.
The addition of a weekend start to deer hunting season has given hunters more opportunities. In 2020, 84% of respondents to the Game Commission’s survey said they hunted on Saturday, and 60% said they hunted on Sunday.
Those opportunities may have helped Pennsylvania avoid a dip in hunting that other states had.
“We did conduct a survey following the first year the season opened on Saturday, when we experienced an increase in license sales when most states lost sales,” Lau said. “In short, there was a strong correlation between the Saturday opener and the increase.”
Though the change broke a tradition of a Monday opening day that lasted over 50 years, many hunters have embraced it. Keeping hunting cultures and other traditions alive, however, will require more work in the Commonwealth.
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Well first off I don’t believe the PGC numbers! There is no way there had been almost 100,00 more deer killed in 20 21! Shooting is way down and processors have seen significant decline in deer being brought in! This brown it’s down mentality is not good! Go back to a 3 day doe season!! More opportunity is awesome as long as there are deer to see!
I enjoy left overs on Friday after Thanksgiving fest. We have the 5th generation hunting in the Bedford area. We would leave early Sunday morn stop for breakfast and continued up the Mt to checkout areas we would hunt (sweetroot area in Bedforford cty.) We would stay in a motel in Bedford. Buy snacks for the kids and beers for the adults. Total money spent was around 400.00 dollars. Not counting gas and Pa turnpike tolls. Irwin exit to Bedford. I’m 70 years old and been doing this since early 1980. Just memories now. I still hunt but not the… Read more »
That is a one sided PGC propaganda article. Hunters are not adjusting. Businesses in the north are not adjusting. Camps are not adjusting. It has ruined hunting as we knew it for my 60+ years of hunting. I will not support the PGC in any way until this unpopular change is reversed!
Yes sir,ruined it for me and the rest of my hunting party. The year after the start of this fiasco we lost 75 percent of our party. They stole deer camp from us. I’m guessing the “60” percent approval are from public land hunters that do not have a spot to camp. This has to change back. Most can’t leave because of Thanksgiving holiday and Black Friday work obligations… so unfair to us that do deer season the right way..I want the tradition of deer camp back so bad…it’s all gone..arrive at camp Friday night after dark and setting up… Read more »