WINNER, WINNER RAFFLE TAG PULLS IN NO. 1 BULL BY BOB FRYE Duane Kramer didn't fly across the country - more than 2,000 air miles each way - on two different occasions just to shoot any old elk. He lives in Bellingham, Wash. Excluding Alaska, that's about as far west of Pennsylvania as you can go in the continental United States without wading into the Pacific Ocean. It's as close to Vancouver as it is Seattle. Plus, he's hunted elk in multiple states, harvested four or five - one them boasting FEBRUARY 2022 390 inches of antlers - and accompanied friends as they filled tags. So if he was going to take an elk here, he wanted it to be special. You might say this qualifies. Kramer - who won the 2020 Keystone Elk Country Alliance (KECA) elk tag raffle, allowing him to hunt over 58 days that fall in any elk hunt zone - took the biggest bull elk ever harvested in Pennsylvania. Taken in Elk County, it scored 455. That ranks it as Pennsylvania's new 9