AAA Alaskan Outfitters
Congratulations to AAA Alaskan Outfitters and my former partner and longtime friend Brent Jones for taking APHA’s SCI “Top” two awards for brown bears in 2023 and to guide Troy Kitchel for guiding brown bear hunter, Lance LeFleur, on the animal that won APHA’s 2023 Outstanding Animal Award. This first place giant had a 30 6/16” skull! After all these years, AAA continues to take bears of this quality.
Brent and I started AAA Alaskan Outfitters and had our first season in the spring of 1984. That year we harvested the brown bears that took first and third place honors in the APHA SCI Awards. Brent guided the largest one which squared 10’10” with a skull of 29 5/16”. What a way to start! At that time there was no such thing as the “Outstanding Animal Award.” If there had been, AAA Alaskan Outfitters would have won with the bear that Brent guided on.
In 1987, APHA partnering with the Foundation For North American Wild Sheep came up with the APHA Outfitter of the Year Award. It was given to the outfitter for an animal that was taken the previous year that ranked the highest in the Boone and Crockett Record Book. FNAWS presented that outfitter with a rifle at the APHA’s Annual Convention.
In 1989, AAA Alaskan Outfitters received that award for a first-place brown bear that I guided hunter John Bermen on in the spring of ‘88. The skull scored 29 6/16”. My wife still has that .270 Remington Mountain rifle that they presented to me. I had the stock cut down and gave it to her.
In 1993, AAA won again with a giant brown bear that our other partner Dan Schwarzer guided Randy Cain on in the spring of ‘92. It squared 11’3” with a 30 5/16” skull. It tied for the new SCI World Record with a bear taken on Kodiak Island by an Alaska resident that same spring.
Sometime in the mid to late 90’s the APHA Board changed the award from the “outstanding outfitter” to the “outstanding animal.”
So, as I said before AAA Alaskan Outfitters has had a long history of taking giant brown bears. Thirty-nine years to be exact. It’s a shame the current US Fish and Wildlife Service didn’t use these high conservation ideas when choosing the new permit holders. It is a known wildlife management fact that killing these giant bears increases the overall population of brown bears. These bears are the highest contributors to cub mortality. Brent is currently in the appeal process for the guiding permit for AAA’s areas.
I hope the US Fish and Wildlife Service comes to their senses and not kill an era!