So you won't take the elk--how about the antlers? Rainy River Elk Company responding to ruminant ban, selling antler velvet, other parts overseas.

AuthorLarmour, Adelle
PositionKENORA & DRYDEN

Getting the best bang for the buck is the name of the game for the Rainy River Elk Company.

Nothing is wasted when it comes to making the best possible use out of the animal. Deborah Cornell and Bill Darby, a husband and wife duo, maintain a multi-faceted operation with about 160 elk on their 162-acre farm, 16 kilometres west of Fort Frances.

Cornell grew up on a beef farm in the area, so she is no stranger to farming.

Darby, who works for the Ministry of Natural Resources, earned a Master's level degree studying caribou and a PhD studying white-tail deer habitat.

Cornell and Darby researched domestic and global markets, knowing there was a demand for velvet antler in Asia, and for breeding stock in the United States.

According to Cornell, the velvet antler is used as a nutraceutical, a nutritional medicine which gets dried, ground down and capsulated.

"Velvet antler is really prized by Chinese and Korean cultures," Cornell says. "Koreans give velvet antler to their young and elderly, much like how we take vitamins in the winter."

Cornell says many North Americans use it for joint-related conditions. Its insulin-like growth hormones help boost immune systems.

The antler is taken from the bull at a certain stage of growth before it begins to harden or calcify. It's a renewable resource, as bulls produce velvet every year with the growth of a new set of antlers each spring. Mature bulls, about 7-8 years old, can produce between 30 to 40 pounds of velvet each year, according to the North American Elk Breeders Association website. As a commodity, the price has ranged from $15 per pound to $100 per pound since Cornell has been in the business. She sells it to the Chinese and Korean markets.

"It has always been a volatile and (unpredictable) industry," Cornell says.

The market peaked in 1997, but since the BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy), or mad cow disease, debacle closed the American and other international borders to ruminant livestock, their Korean buyers have been off limits.

The BSE scare has impacted more than just the cattle industry. The sickness is called chronic wasting disease in elk. The borders have prevented all ruminants (bison, elk, camels, giraffes) from travelling to the United States.

Cornell says they literally sold hundreds of elk over the years, exporting to states such as Ohio, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota.

Expecting movement at the borders in the spring of 2005...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT