LAMAMIE, Wyo. -(Ammoland.com)- In its fifth year, the Wyoming Women’s Antelope Hunt brings women from across the nation together at the Ranch at Ucross in northeast Wyoming for a weekend of hunting, mentorship and camaraderie. It also raises funds and awareness for the Wyoming Women’s Foundation (WYWF).
The event continues to find wide support across the country and bring in some big names in hunting. This year the hunt welcomes Courtney Nicolson, a Denver-based outdoor writer, producer and editor.
Nicolson is a senior writer/producer for Outdoor Sportsman Group Networks, working on content for Sportsman Channel, Outdoor Channel and World Fishing Network. Nicolson also writes a monthly column for Women’s Outdoor News called “She Guides” which spotlights women hunting guides around the world. She is an avid hunter and angler, but didn’t grow up hunting.
Like 12 of the 44 hunters who will be participating at this year’s event, Nicolson’s first hunt experience was alongside a more experienced female hunter. Something she feels is positive.
“It’s important that the people teaching hunting aren’t just men,” says Nicolson, who also notes she’s teaching her dad to hunt. “If hunting is to continue as a tradition, we need everyone’s help.”
Sarah Chapman, Wyoming Women’s Foundation director, is delighted to have Nicolson in attendance. “We feel so fortunate to have someone as experienced and enthusiastic as Courtney joining us! All of the hunters can learn so much from her.”
Beyond hunting, the fifth annual Wyoming Women’s Antelope Hunt raises awareness of and funds for the Wyoming Women’s Foundation whose mission is to help women achieve economic self-sufficiency.
The Wyoming Women’s Antelope Hunt will be Oct. 12-15 at the Ranch at Ucross, 17 miles outside of Buffalo.
The event provides training on all aspects of hunting, from harvesting to processing. For more information visit www.WyomingWomensAntelopeHunt.org or call 307.721.7007.
About the Wyoming Women’s Foundation:
The Wyoming Women’s Foundation is a priority fund of the Wyoming Community Foundation, which granted out over $6 million to nonprofits across the state in 2016. The Women’s Foundation builds on a permanent endowment that will ensure funding to enhance the lives of women and girls in Wyoming for generations to come. It makes grants to organizations that help Wyoming women and girls attain economic self-sufficiency, creates statewide awareness of the barriers to economic self-sufficiency, and supports systems change to eliminate those barriers. Since its inception in 1999, the foundation has invested more than $832,000 into almost 100 organizations. Learn more at www.wywf.org.