Whitehorse Daily Star

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HUNTING HIGH AND LOW – Kolter McHale, left and Greg McHale on the hunt recently in the Yukon in August 2021.

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RIGHTEOUS RACK – Kolter McHale, foreground, with sheep’s head in his pack while on a hunting trip in August 2021 in the Yukon. His father, Greg McHale, is in the background.

McHale family part 2: Greg McHale’s Wild Yukon hunting show

The McHale family of Whitehorse is driven to succeed in sports as well as life.

By Morris Prokop on January 11, 2023

The McHale family of Whitehorse is driven to succeed in sports as well as life.

In part 2 of a look at the exceptional family, the Star talked with them about Greg McHale’s Wild Yukon hunting show.

“We’re going into season seven, said Greg McHale. “We’ve been on television now for this. We’ve produced six seasons. So the show is doing really well. I think the way that we shoot and the way that we hunt in the Yukon, it really resonates with people. People are obviously very interested in the Yukon and they have been for a number of years, whether it’s through a gold show or through the wild places that we have, so that production side and the hunting is, it’s great.

“I didn’t necessarily think that I would ever make my love of hunting into a career. But I think … when you have opportunities you take (them) and that’s kind of how we’ve always been and sometimes you create opportunities and that was one of them that we worked on. We worked hard to get to get it to where it is and I think that really resonates with people – the beauty that we have here in the Yukon, the style of which we hunt, is unique. And people like to see things that are unique and it’s a product out there that is taking off and it just keeps getting bigger and keeps getting better. It’s been a lot of fun.”

McHale explains what makes his show unique.

“Well, obviously the Yukon in itself, the terrain we have to hunt. The amount of game we have to hunt. That stands on its own like, if you were to talk to any big game hunter that is serious about their hunting, the Yukon would be a bucket list item without a doubt. So that in and of itself is pretty special to be able to hunt and do it in an amazing place like this.

“And then on top of that, just the way we hunt with a lot of human power and you know putting in more physical effort than you would ever see on any other television show. It’s that simple.

“I don’t know anybody else in the hunting world that would fly their own airplane, land it, hike 30 kilometres to the base of the mountain to start hunting. That’s unique. So we bring that style of the physical fitness aspect and what it takes to hunt and not just go out and hunt.

“I really enjoy targeting older, bigger animals that are ideally beyond their prime. And I take a lot of pride in putting in the extra effort that it takes to not just shoot the first moose you see, to really do more work than anybody else is willing to do. Generally speaking.”

McHale has his own way of getting to his hunting territories.

“I have my own airplanes that I got for the sole purpose of being able to get further into the backcountry. I didn’t have any interest in learning to fly an airplane just to get out and just look around.

“I love aviation and the family gets to go out to beautiful places because of it. But the initial interest in aviation was strictly to get me to places that nobody else can get to or that very few people have the ability to go in and ever see.”

Production values are also important to McHale.

“I think our production value is really good. We’re always working on trying to get better, whether it’s better production or whether it’s maintaining a high level of fitness for myself or researching new areas. I don’t like hunting the same area time after time, which a lot of other hunting shows do, right. You know, put up a tree stand and sit and wait for a deer to walk over to the bait pile. It’s just not that style of hunting.

“As long as I’m able and I still enjoy it then I’ll continue to do it but those are really the nuts and the bolts of what makes us different. The American audience and the Canadian audiences just seem to be happy with it.”

For the McHales, hunting spans the generations.

“The last number of years I’ve hunted with my father, who’s in his mid ‘70s, for sheep,” said Greg.

Kolter McHale seems to have inherited his father and grandfather’s tenacity.

“We took Kolter on his first sheep hunt when he was seven. He was hiking up the mountains. That’s where I think that we recognized his tenacity and his willingness to deal with difficult situations and get through them, I wouldn’t say easily but have the ability and mental strength to be able to push through.”

According to his father, Kolter has also pitched in where he can.

“He’s seeing his grandfather in his mid-70’s push through these kind of things and recognize that ‘I can help where I can help.’ When he was seven, he literally could see my father suffering and he would come up and say ‘Can I carry the gun?’ For a seven year old to take a 10-pound rifle off his grandfather, as a parent, it’s a pretty special thing to see.

“For three generations to get together and be able to work toward a common goal that is very difficult for one of them, and everybody to chip in and do their part, that was the highlight of my hunting career. It doesn’t get better than that. And it doesn’t matter whether I take an amazingly huge animal or whatever, those things pale in comparison to being out with your family. And a seven year old and a 75 year old at the time, both dealing with challenges in a different way, but at the same time.”

Kolter McHale said “It was really fun.”

Denise McHale added that it will be “pretty neat in a couple of years for him to be able to harvest his first animal. That’ll be another one of those moments.”

Comments (24)

Up 23 Down 2

Patti Eyre on Jan 17, 2023 at 3:18 pm

Looks Like Greg McHale got off on breaking the law while outfitting, maybe not the golf standard after all: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/court-clears-yukon-outfitters-on-wildlife-act-charges-1.845900

Up 29 Down 3

Yeah Right on Jan 17, 2023 at 12:16 pm

Why is there no mention of the Yukon taxpayers dollars provided to Mr. McHale or his companies to produce the show or travel to this show? A simple search shows It was $100,000 in 20/21 from the production fund alone. https://yukon.ca/sites/yukon.ca/files/ecdev/ecdev-yukon-film-sound-incentive-program-annual-report-2020-2021.pdf

Hopefully the reporter will do his research and update the story...

Up 59 Down 2

Ovis Dalli on Jan 14, 2023 at 9:08 am

He’s not trophy hunting. Trophy hunters spend a lifetime searching for the animal of a lifetime, and while I don’t trophy hunt, I understand and appreciate it.
He’s not hunting to feed his family. He owns two aircraft for Pete’s sake, and while we all enjoy eating quality meat, how much wild meat does one family need?
He’s hunting for likes on his social media feeds.
Period.
When, not if, Yukoners are put on quotas on all species, you can thank guys like this joker who cut every tag they get, not because then need to, but because they can.
You can thank the Yukon government as well for not closing loopholes in the legislation that allow for stunts like this free from regulation.

Up 59 Down 1

Vern Schlimbesser on Jan 14, 2023 at 8:49 am

At this very moment Greg is at the Hunting show in Reno Nevada looking for hunters to accompany him on a sheep hunt in Yukon. That used to be a business regulated by Government, apparently he found another loop-hole in the law?

Up 77 Down 3

Charlie Foxtrot on Jan 13, 2023 at 4:04 pm

I’m a commercial pilot flying for a 703 operator here in the north.
I’ve seen this characters videos and in them he’s essentially operating as a commercial carrier flying all sorts of people including hunters he’s special guiding. Curious how a private pilot gets this all past Transport Canada? I mean, our company has to carry all sorts of insurance, increased inspection periods on our aircraft etc.
Maybe he’s got a special arrangement with TC?
Seems like an accident waiting to happen.

Up 52 Down 2

Connie on Jan 13, 2023 at 3:37 pm

Awesome PR piece, I mean article, or actually I'm not even sure what that was.

Up 72 Down 2

Anie on Jan 13, 2023 at 2:50 pm

Please - no more. This writing is so cringe worthy as to be embarrassing. Just stop.

Up 79 Down 3

BnR on Jan 13, 2023 at 2:33 pm

Pimping out the Yukons wildlife as a vanity project is peak Greg McHale.
Wish he’d go back to Ontario.

Up 56 Down 0

Citizens Arrest! on Jan 12, 2023 at 9:57 pm

I hope his buddy Ryan Leef makes an appearance in the next instalment.

Up 81 Down 3

Sheep Hunter on Jan 12, 2023 at 6:31 pm

Thank goodness I read this article and learned from Greg himself that real hunting isn't simply "just going out and shooting the first moose I see"
Now I know that real hunting is buying a plane, getting a bunch of sponsors, then flying around until I find the ram that will look the best on film, then making sure I beat everyone else to it, then saying I parked my plane 30kms away and used only fitness to earn my trophy, and it's only coincidence that it's the same ram I saw from the plane two days ago in the same spot I left it.
I'll make sure to tell my father and grandfather that hunting isn't actually about the animal, the mountains, the adventure, the experience, the story, the meat or the chase. It's actually about controlling all the elements until success is all but guaranteed... And then making sure to post it on social media, because validation and status is the real trophy.

Up 12 Down 88

Connie on Jan 12, 2023 at 3:49 pm

Awesome article about a family devoted to the outdoors!

Up 10 Down 79

Connie on Jan 12, 2023 at 3:46 pm

Awesome articles thanks

Up 100 Down 14

TJ on Jan 12, 2023 at 3:16 pm

Wow, these people are unbearably full of themselves. This is an extremely cringy “series” that they must have paid for.

Up 89 Down 6

Yukon Hunter on Jan 12, 2023 at 2:21 pm

This show and the hunting methods displayed go completely against the ethics most real hunters were brought up to understand.
“Take only what you need, use all that you take” doesn’t apply here. In order to film this show, an excessive number of animals are harvested each year in our backyard simply for the purposes of film and entertainment.
Next, you have the premise that working harder generates trophy quality animals. When in reality the show is built around scouting every inch of a mountain range by plane until the specific sheep is found that will make the hunter seem like he is a great hunter (meanwhile harassing every other animal), then making a direct B-line to that animal and shooting it likely 49 hours after scouting. Not exactly “hunting”
The need to harvest the absolute largest bison, moose, sheep, goat etc is pure narcissism and has nothing to do with filming a quality adventure. Don’t get me wrong, I also look for the largest animal I can find, but I’m satisfied if I go home with nothing, or a sub par trophy
Then you have the over excessive sponsorship. Don’t you know that you simply cannot harvest a big sheep unless the hunter and everyone around them are wearing and carrying $3000 worth of Kuiu?
Then you watch the show and it's very obvious for some Yukoners exactly where the hunt was filmed. No effort to conceal areas. This shows a lack of respect for information. Something many true hunters value. It’s like cutting a trail, once its cut you can't stop people from going. This show is opening up a lot of areas to people who wouldn’t have otherwise known about.
I will end it on a positive note. I respect the family values that Greg brings into his show. He does a great job of including his father, his son and his wife in his “hunts”. Multi generational hunts are a thing of the past, and I do enjoy seeing him put extra effort into helping his family share some of the experiences. I will not criticize him for that.
Just wish he was passing along the right practices and teaching the right ethics.

Up 68 Down 6

Vlad on Jan 12, 2023 at 9:36 am

I’m a little confused here, did the Star go looking to do a write up on this family or vice versa? If it did go looking I would suggest many more ethical hunting families in the que, if they sought out the Star then….I digress.

Up 56 Down 9

Lea on Jan 12, 2023 at 2:56 am

Pretty sad that there is no longer anywhere in this vast Yukon territory where wildlife can live out their lives without interference by humans.

Up 69 Down 7

Sad on Jan 11, 2023 at 10:24 pm

Too bad he has focused all that energy on killing. I'm not impressed, Greg. You sure have a funny little hobby there. Getting out to see beautiful, rare places, nature in it's original glory, and what's your take on it? "I'm going to kill something big!" Really, really sad.

Up 63 Down 7

Pat on Jan 11, 2023 at 8:05 pm

I am truly confused about these two McHale family articles. Did the family ask for them or did the author have no news to report? I find both of these articles to paint this family poorly. It makes them seem completely out of touch with reality of life. "For a seven year old to take a 10-pound rifle off his grandfather, as a parent, it’s a pretty special thing to see."
I'm sorry... but this being a pretty special thing to see is foul.

Up 11 Down 66

Gregor on Jan 11, 2023 at 7:08 pm

Nice to see someone living the dream. I am sure it took a lot of guts and drive to make this business model work. Very impressive and I have learned quite a bit from watching the McHale's various media. Good stuff!

Up 37 Down 7

Dave on Jan 11, 2023 at 4:57 pm

Clowns, no more less, their super hunters.

Up 53 Down 3

Atom on Jan 11, 2023 at 4:08 pm

Please moderators, it's a valid question...What did I just read?!

Up 90 Down 7

JC on Jan 11, 2023 at 3:19 pm

These articles... yeesh

Up 75 Down 15

Kate on Jan 11, 2023 at 2:27 pm

For a series about the family, it’s skewed pretty 98/2 to a focus on the men.

Up 127 Down 10

Jeremy on Jan 11, 2023 at 2:24 pm

Did the family pay for this “series?” It reads like an ad they wrote for themselves. There’s no reporting here - just a narcissist being given some blank pages to say whatever he wants.

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