Remember that hunting trip Donald Trump Jr. had planned for Alaska? It’s happening.

Donald Trump, Jr. speaking with supporters of his father, Donald Trump, at a campaign rally at the Sun Devil Fitness Center at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona. (Photo by Gage Skidmore / CC BY-SA 2.0)

Rumors went around Juneau on Tuesday that Donald Trump Jr. was in town for a hunting trip planned earlier this year. While the guide leading the hunt could not confirm where Trump was on Tuesday, he said the trip is still going forward.

Keegan McCarthy owns Coastal Alaska Adventures, a business that guides visitors on yacht-based hunts. Back in February, he auctioned off an opportunity to join Trump and his son on a weeklong hunt for Sitka black-tailed deer and ducks in Southeast Alaska. The chance to join Trump sold for $150,000.

McCarthy said they still intend to go on the trip, but the region’s weather is hindering their plans.

“We’re just on hold right now. We’re going to be kind of waiting to see what happens here,” he said. “Southeast has been getting hit pretty hard.”

For security reasons, McCarthy didn’t say if Trump would be waiting it out in Juneau or when exactly they would set out on their journey. But he said he already met one of his original goals.

McCarthy said the money raised through the auction went toward two programs centered on wildlife conservation and education — the American Wilderness Leadership School and another initiative he’s working out the details for.

Trump identifies as a sportsman and has hunted and fished in Alaska. He made waves earlier this year when he tweeted his opposition to the development of the Pebble Mine in Bristol Bay. His father’s administration had removed a block on the mine that was there from the Obama Administration.

McCarthy also said he will still use the hunt as an opportunity to teach people about the Tongass National Forest, which the Trump administration lifted protections for in October.

“We’re still trying to educate the administration on the Tongass National Forest and do whatever we can to keep the Roadless Rule intact, even though it may be too late. But we’ll find out,” he said.

Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly named Coastal Alaska Adventures as Coast Alaska Adventures.

Shayne Nuesca

Director of Content Strategy, KTOO

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