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About

About CWDCrossing

A restrained, source-cited answer to the pair-wise question hunters actually ask: I hunted in one state and I'm bringing the carcass home to another — what parts can I legally bring?

Mission

CWD carcass-transport rules are set by each destination state, change every pre-season, and are published one state at a time. The result is a pair-wise question that no single-state lookup answers well. CWDCrossing decodes the origin × destination pair, returns what parts you can bring in, and cites the state agency's own page for every answer — so you can verify it yourself before you load the truck.

Reviewer

Expert review in progress. Our reviewer is being recruited from state wildlife-agency public-information officers, certified wildlife biologists (via The Wildlife Society directory), and hunting-organization compliance officers (National Deer Association, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, Boone & Crockett Club). We will not publish a name or credential until a real, credentialed person has signed off.

Editorial standards

Every transport rule carries a primary-source link and a last-verified date. We never generate a rule from memory. Where we cannot confirm a state's current rule from a primary source, we mark it "verify directly" rather than guess. Read more on the methodology page, see the full source manifest, or check the changelog.

Contact

Questions, corrections, or a state agency notice we should reflect? Email [email protected].

CWDCrossing is operated by Desymphony. It is an informational hub for hunters, not a state agency and not affiliated with one.