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By JOE MACALUSO
Advocate outdoors writer
Deer hunters across Louisiana have an added incentive to participate in the
Hunters for the Hungry Committee's annual campaign to feed the state's needy in
their communities. "We hit it big this year," Hunters for the Hungry
co-founder Richard Campbell said. "We are taking hunters' donations to a
new level."
Hunters contributing freshly taken deer in six major cities in the state and in
Natchez, Miss., will be entered in a raffle for a Bad Boy Buggy, the newest in
small four-wheel-drive vehicles. The all-electric ATV is valued at $8,000.
Campbell said committee efforts across the state have resulted in a
much-expanded list of game processors accepting the donations of freshly taken
deer.
"There is no cost to the hunter other than the effort it takes to get the
game to the processors," Campbell said.
For most processors, all that's needed is that the hunter field dress the deer.
Most will skin the deer and process the venison for soup kitchens, senior
citizens' community centers and other need-based organizations in their local
communities.
"The best part is that if hunters wants to skin the deer, they can keep the
backstrap and the tenderloins," Campbell said. "Either way, they are
entered in the raffle."
The committee kicks off its annual campaign with today's Clean Out Your Freezer
Day, and continues its efforts for the next six months with the appeal for
donations of fresh game, notably deer.
In 10 years, the Hunters for the Hungry in Baton Rouge, and later joined by the
Monroe-based Sportsmen Share Your Harvest Committee and volunteers in
Alexandria, Lafayette, New Orleans, Shreveport, and even Natchez, Miss., have
collected more than 150,000 pounds of frozen fresh game and meat.
The Greater Baton Rouge Food Bank distributes the game to more than 100
organization in the Capital City area.
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