The Voice of the Community Since 1909, Serving Moorcroft and Pine Haven, Wyoming

Changing of the guard

Farewell John D. Davis, welcome Jake Miller

After a 31-year career with the state of Wyoming, 24 of which were spent serving the Moorcroft community, game warden John Davis has retired. Davis grew up in the Moorcroft area and then attended Sheridan College and the University of Wyoming.

During the summer of his senior year at UW, he took a job on the Wyoming Game and Fish reservoir crew, a work unit dedicated to patrols on Wyoming’s waters. “I’d gone to college with Scott Talbott (who later became a game warden and eventually director of the Game and Fish Department),” said Davis.

“We were pretty good buddies and that summer before I graduated, Scott and I were talking and I told him I wasn’t sure what I was going to do after graduation. He asked me what I thought about doing law enforcement and told me about the reservoir crew. I thought it sounded like a pretty good deal and I would give it a try. So ultimately Scott is responsible for the whole deal.”

Davis worked on the reservoir crew in the summer of 1989 in Sheridan and Moorcroft. After graduating from UW in December 1989, Davis worked that winter for Game and Fish on Gros Ventre elk feed-grounds and returned in the summer of 1990 for his second year on the reservoir crew, this time stationed at Glendo Reservoir.

He was then hired as a game warden trainee in Laramie and attended the Wyoming Law Enforcement Academy in January 1991. He was assigned his first warden district in Kaycee where he served for five years before applying for and receiving the Moorcroft game warden position upon the retirement of Sid Clark in 1995.

“I think it gave me at least a two year advantage by moving into a warden district where I knew the roads, I knew a lot of the people and I guess more importantly, people knew me,” he said, about the decision to pursue a law enforcement career in his hometown. “I thought at first it might be kind of awkward but nobody has ever put me in a position to have to choose between a friendship and my job.”

“Actually the first fall I was in Moorcroft I got a tip from an acquaintance that led to the Sagebrush Outfitter case, which at the time was the biggest poaching case in the state,” he said. “That was just from people already knowing me when I got here. That case was certainly a learning curve because at the time our license system was not computerized so it led to some long days in the Cheyenne headquarters basement, hand-searching paper licenses. It was pretty tedious stuff!”

In addition to law enforcement, Davis said his warden career offered him unique opportunities to work hands-on with wildlife.

“It is something that the public really doesn’t have a chance to do, handle wildlife, and back in the day I was actually part of the net-gunning crew on a helicopter,” he said. “We collared some elk on the south Bighorns and I was one of the three guys in the helicopter, bailing out, tying these elk down and putting on collars.

I’ve flown as a spotter for the pilot when we captured antelope at the time when we required a Game and Fish employee in the helicopter to look for power lines and such while the pilot was flying. That’s been fun.”

As part of his duties, Davis served as the firearms instructor for game wardens in the Sheridan Region from 1997 until his retirement. Regional instructors are responsible for training wardens to be proficient in the use and maintenance of the firearms they carry in the field. Regional instructors also research and recommend to administrative leaders, the preferred firearms to be issued to wardens.

Davis was also a longtime hunter safety and canoe and water safety instructor for youth in the Moorcroft area. For more than 20 years, students from Rozet, Hulett and Moorcroft learned from Davis how to properly fit and wear a lifejacket, how to safely handle firearms, how to stay safe while boating or canoeing and many more outdoor skills.

“Looking back on it all, I think the public as a whole still has respect for game wardens, which has probably saved some game warden lives,” said Davis. “Just the nature of our job can be dangerous, working in remote areas and people don’t know always where you are at. But people still seem to respect game wardens. I think because more often than not, game wardens help people rather than punish them. We’ll tell folks if the fish are biting and on what, where the best hunting is, where to go, where to look and that sort of thing. We are a resource for the public.”

Davis’ last day as a game warden was April 2, 2020.

Game Warden Jacob Miller, while currently assigned to the Moorcroft area, will be assigned permanently as of July 1.

WELCOME JAKE MILLER

A North Dakota native, Miller grew up on a ranch in the south-central part of the state. He attended college at Valley City State University in Valley City, North Dakota and graduated in spring 2015 with bachelor degrees in wildlife management and mathematics.

“I started out as a math education major,” Miller said, about his double degrees. “But growing up, I always loved being around wildlife. Hunting and fishing with my family are some of my fondest memories.

I eventually decided I didn’t want to be tied to a classroom and I wanted to pursue a career where I would be outside for a good portion of it.”

After graduation, Miller accepted a technician job at the North Dakota Wildlife Health Laboratory in Bismarck where he assisted with research projects, deer surveys,

mountain lion captures and other duties. Though he enjoyed the biological aspect of wildlife management, he spent time with local game wardens while at the lab and decided to enter the field of wildlife law enforcement.

“When I graduated I didn’t know if I wanted to be a warden or biologist,” he said. “But in the lab position I got the opportunity to work with a lot of game wardens and decided to switch to wildlife law enforcement as a focus of what I wanted to do.”

He was hired by North Dakota as a game warden in June 2016 and then attended the North Dakota Law Enforcement Academy. After receiving his certification he was stationed as a game warden in Killdeer, North Dakota, where he remained until he was hired by Wyoming Game and Fish. He began his duties in Moorcroft on April 6, 2020.

“As a kid, we would always vacation here, take camping trips and go fishing,” said Miller, about his decision to relocate to Wyoming. “On the work side of things, the fact I could do wildlife biology and law enforcement in this position was a motivating factor. I love it out here and wish I had made this change a lot earlier. It is a beautiful area and everyone I have met has been very friendly. My neighboring wardens in Gillette and John Davis have been a great help to me and I am starting to learn more about the area. Moorcroft has turned out to be a really nice community.”