Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 3
Cody Johnson Defends 10-Day Alaska Grizzly Hunt as Conservation Effort
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 3

Cody Johnson Defends 10-Day Alaska Grizzly Hunt as Conservation Effort

2 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 3

Summary

  • Johnson said on “American Country Countdown” that his recent Alaska grizzly hunt was legal, meat-harvesting and rooted in wildlife management, not trophy killing.
  • The country singer said Alaska officials told him male grizzlies can eat 120 to 150 moose or caribou calves a year, putting pressure on prey populations already facing tighter hunting regulation.
  • Photos from the 10-day trip drew thousands of reactions online, with supporters praising a lawful hunt and critics challenging the ethics of killing an apex predator even under regulated seasons.
  • Alaska issues limited brown bear permits, and supporters say tag and license fees help fund conservation, while opponents argue grizzlies hold a special place in North American wildlife regardless of population health.
  • The backlash echoes Johnson’s 2025 dispute over a record urial ram taken on a Texas high-fence ranch, another legal hunt that split fans over hunting standards.

Insights

Beyond hunting, could a new animal rights law effectively outlaw farming and fishing in an entire state?
If Oregon bans hunting, what is the backup plan to fund billions in wildlife conservation?
Is killing a grizzly bear for population control a conservation victory or a moral failure?