Elkfest: A Weekend-Long Celebration
Travel+Leisure has named Jackson Hole its No. 1 "Best Place to Travel in May" in large part due to our Elkfest and Old West Days.
Every spring, thousands of elk wintering on the National Elk Refuge lose their antlers before they migrate to their summer range. In late April each year, the Jackson Hole Boy Scouts assist U.S. Fish and Wildlife with harvesting the shed antlers, scouring the 25,000-acre refuge for the elk racks they will then auction off to bidders during the Jackson Hole ElkFest on Town Square.
The annual wapiti jubilee is a supremely Jackson Hole event, attended by thousands from around the world. Held the weekend before Memorial Day weekend, the two-day celebration—built around the famous, one-of-a-kind public antler auction—includes the High Noon Chili Cook-Off and start of the two-week Mountain Man Rendezvous.
This year, the 57th annual auction starts at 10 a.m., Saturday, May 17th. Bidders will seek out the best antlers to make furniture, wall decorations, jewelry and food products from. Hundreds upon hundreds of white and brown antlers will be laid out all across Town Square by 8 a.m.—a truly jaw-dropping sight if there ever was one!
There is no cost to attend the auction or the other festivities.
Elk Antler Auction by the Numbers
- 1968: Year the auction began
- 8,000: Average pounds of antler that are offered for auction annually by the Jackson District Boy Scouts.
- 13,698: The record total poundage of antlers collected, set in 2014.
- $23: Average price per pound of antler
- $218,421: Amount raised at the 2024 auction
- 2,000: Amount of hours the roughly 200 scouts and adult leaders spend collecting elk antlers, cleaning them, organizing them and generally preparing the dropped sheds.
- 75: The percentage of proceeds from the auction that is donated by the Boy Scouts to be used for long-term habitat improvement projects at the National Elk Refuge; the other 25% goes towards funding the Boy Scouts’ Friends of Scouting dues.
Schedule of Events for ElkFest
SATURDAY, MAY 17
- 7 a.m. Preview antler lots for Boy Scouts of America Elk Antler Auction
- 7 a.m.-2 p.m. Food court provided by Jackson Youth Baseball
- 8 a.m.-2 p.m.: Jackson Hole Historical Society and Museum booth private antler sale north of the Town Square (on Center Street) by Rotary Club
- 9 a.m.: Registration begins for Boy Scouts of America Elk Antler Auction
- 9 a.m.-1 p.m.: Elk Antler Auction Kids’ Corner, including educational tables and games. Sponsored by Wyoming Game & Fish, Jackson Hole Weed Management, National Elk Refuge, and the Jackson Hole Historical Society
- 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.: Mountain Man Rendezvous at Teton County Fairgrounds.
- 10 a.m.-1 p.m.: World Famous Jackson Hole Boy Scout Elk Antler Auction
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11 a.m.-10 p.m.: TetonPowWow is a celebration of American Indian culture, presented outside by Central Wyoming College and Native American Jump Start at Munger Mountain Elementary School. Indigenous knowledge keepers will share their rich culture, traditions, dance and history from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Cost is $15 per vehicle; Native Americans get in free. Please BYO chairs.
FRIDAY, MAY 15-MONDAY, MAY 26: Mountain Man Rendezvous and Traders Row
- 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily: Experience history with a modern twist! Held on the Teton County Fairgrounds, Traders Row will feature refreshments and hand-crafted goods along with interactive competitions featuring bow and arrow, hawk and knife competition and Atlatl. The Mountain Man Rendezvous traditionally begins ElkFest weekend and continues through Old West Days.
SUNDAY, MAY 18th at Noon: Jackson Hole High Noon Chili Cook-Off
- Join the Jackson Hole Chamber of Commerce in celebrating chili cuisine. Teams compete to deliver the best tastes of chili in the West. Professional and amateur teams will take pride in serving you some of the best chili to wind down the ElkFest weekend. Purchase an all-you-can-sample spoon to try all the chili you want, grab a beer to wash it down (21+), and vote for your fave!
Fun Elk Antlers Fact
The iconic antler arches at each corner of Jackson Hole’s Town Square were originally built from antlers found on the refuge. Each arch is made up of around 2,000 antlers and weighs between 10,000 to 12,000 pounds. The first one was built in 1953 and the remaining three were constructed more than 10 years later.
Most of the four million visitors who come here seem to want a photograph in front of the arches that have come to symbolize Jackson Hole, the most popular arch being the one on the southwest corner of the Square.