
Evergreen Revival of Episode 27 (Originally released December 28, 2013)
In 2013, Big Buck Registry recorded Episode 27 — a conversation that quietly became one of the most important episodes in the show's history. In it, we interviewed certified wildlife biologist Jeff Makemson of the Alabama Division of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries, exploring a topic most hunters never think about:
Where does conservation funding actually come from?
The answer leads directly to the Pittman–Robertson Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act of 1937 — the law that rebuilt America's wildlife, restored whitetail deer from near extinction, and created the modern system of game management we rely on today.
In this revived evergreen episode, we:
Revisit the original 2013 interview
Clarify a few points that time and research have refined
Update what has changed since then
And deliver a deep-dive monologue explaining the full story behind the Act
If you hunt deer today, this law is part of your story — whether you knew it or not.
What You'll Hear in This Episode• How close deer and other game species came to disappearing in the early 1900s • Why unregulated market hunting devastated wildlife populations • How sportsmen themselves pushed for federal conservation funding • What the Pittman–Robertson Act actually does • How the firearms and ammunition excise tax funds wildlife restoration • How states receive and use Pittman–Robertson funds • How deer populations rebounded from a few thousand to tens of millions • Why hunters are America's largest conservationists • What has changed in conservation funding since 2013 • Why this system still matters for the future of hunting
Featured Guest (Original Interview)Jeff Makemson Certified Wildlife Biologist Alabama Division of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries
Jeff shares firsthand insight into:
Managing public wildlife lands
Restoring deer populations
Funding realities inside state agencies