This fall marks the third year of GiveIN Game, a program that allows hunters to donate deer meat to people who are interested.
Beginning Sept. 1 and continuing through Aug. 1, 2014, people can register online to donate or receive venison. Selling, bartering or trading venison is against the law, so the program, through the Indiana Department of Natural Resources Division of Fish and Wildlife, allows hunters to make venison available to those who want it.
Through the website, hunters and those who want venison are able to sign up in the same system and then contact each other.
Michelle Cain, wildlife information specialist at the Division of Fish and Wildlife, said they started this program as a way for hunters to be able to give away venison they may not need to someone who wants it.
“It gives the hunters the opportunity to hunt more and a way to give venison to people that wanted to feed themselves or their family,” Cain said.
In 2012, GiveIN Game had 774 hunters and buyers sign up. Cain said it hopes to have about 800 participants this year.
Cain said the goal of GiveIN Game is for venison not to be wasted.
“There is more supply than demand,” Cain said. “Generally there are a lot more people that want the venison than there is to give.”
Cain said GiveIN Game provides services where hunters are helping people throughout the community.
“The idea was to connect people who are looking for a healthy alternative source of protein with hunters that have already satisfied their own venison needs,” Cain said.
Chad Stewart, a deer biologist with DNR, said they like to joke and call it “deer harmony.”
“It really works similar to one of those online dating matchup programs,” Stewart said.
“It works very much the same way in that you have people in a certain area that
matches up people that want and need and have a surplus of venison. It provides an outlet for those two groups to connect and meet one another.”
Stewart said after the first year of GiveIN, the program officials did a survey of the participants. Of those who responded, more than 80 percent said they were satisfied and would partcipate again.
“The people who weren’t satisfied were the people who failed to make a connection,” he said.
Follow reporter Alli Friedman on Twitter @afreedz.
Venison sharing program to continue this fall
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