Adam Gall is a hunting guide and owner of Timber to Table Guide Service, a guiding company focused on helping hunters of all skill levels put wild, healthy, and delicious meat on their tables. Based out of the small town of Hotchkiss on Colorado’s Western Slope, Timber to Table offers multi-day hunts on both public and private lands, offering top-notch instruction on everything from the intricacies of elk hunting to the technical skills needed to properly and efficiently process the meat. Adam is highly regarded by many of my friends and past podcast guests and praised as an outside-the-box thinker, so I’m thrilled to finally have him join me for a conversation.
Adam’s professional background gives him a unique perspective on wildlife, land management, and wild places in the American West– he worked as a wildland firefighter, a wolf biologist, and a high school science teacher before devoting himself to full-time guiding. He has also been involved in a variety of volunteer initiatives, ranging from leadership positions with groups like Backcountry Hunters and Anglers to advisory roles on issues such as the wolf reintroduction in Colorado. As you’ll hear in our conversation, Adam thinks deeply and independently on a wide range of land and wildlife issues, and he offers his ideas respectfully and thoughtfully– something we could all use a little more of these days.
I connected with Adam while he was on a family vacation in rural Montana, and we had a wide-ranging conversation that we probably could’ve continued for hours. We started out chatting about his upbringing in Michigan and how he fell in love with hunting despite coming from a family of non-hunters. We talked about Timber to Table– how the guide service came to be, the challenges of running his own business, and his commitment to ethical hunting practices. We talked a lot about wolves and the wolf reintroduction in Colorado, and Adam offered some new thoughts that differ from some of my past podcast guests. He also describes the skills needed to be a great hunter, recommends some of his favorite books, and offers some wise parting words.
This was a thought-provoking conversation that provided a new perspective for me on several important topics, so I hope you enjoy it.
Photo courtesy of Adam Gall
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EPISODE NOTES
Topics Discussed:
- 3:30 – Adam talks about where he grew up
- 9:45 – Adam explains how hunting became a part of his life
- 12:30 – Adam describes his guide service, Timber to Table Guided Service, which provides an educational and holistic hunting and butchering experience
- 19:30 – Adam talks about balancing his work and home life
- 23:30 – Adam talks about how he got into wolf biology prior to his guiding work and dives into the controversy that surrounds them
- 39:15 – Adam discusses his role in the Stakeholder Advisory Group as a part of Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s wolf reintroduction work
- 44:30 – Adam’s resources for learning more about wolves
- 47:00 – Adam gives advice on how to get started in hunting
- 52:45 – Adam discusses what makes an excellent hunter
- 57:15 – Adam’s book recommendations
- 1:02:30 – Adam’s parting words of wisdom
Information Referenced:
- Timber to Table Guide Service
- Chris Dombrowski
- Callan Wink
- Steven Rinella
- Sagebrush Rebellion
- Lolo Pass
- Nez Perce Tribe
- Mike Phillips
- Ted Turner
- Colorado wolf reintroduction legislation (CO Proposition 114)
- Carter Niemeyer
- Mike Jiminez
- Doug Smith
- Dan Flores
- Rick Bass
- Dave Meches
- Carter Niemeyer
- Randy Newberg
- Cory Jacobsen
- Backcountry Hunters and Anglers
- R3 Programs
- Barry Lopez
- Chris Dombrowski
- James Galvin
- Allan Eckert
Enjoy this episode? Then you might like these too:
- Hal Herring – A Man of Words & Wild Places
- Chris Dombrowski – Words, Water & the West
- Mike Phillips – Audacious Goals, Relentless Action
- Kate Kavanaugh – Regeneration & Restoration
- Gabe Vasquez – Advocate for Equity in the Outdoors
- Mark Kenyon – A Passion for Public Lands
- Becca Aceto – Forging Her Own Path in the West
- Rachel VandeVoort – Harnessing the Power of Outdoor Recreation