Thanks to technology, itâs the dawn of a new day for disabled hunters, said a Casper man who's been partially paralyzed for a  decade, but never stopped hunting.
In late 2015, Gerald Gay, then 59, had experienced decades of outdoor adventure when a complication from spinal surgery left him temporarily paralyzed âfrom about the middle of my body down,â he told Cowboy State Daily.
Through physical therapy, he eventually regained the ability to stand and walk short distances with a cane and leg braces.
âThe first thing I asked them to teach me in physical therapy was how to stand up and say the Pledge of Allegiance,â he said.
However, he thought his days of ever seeing the outdoors past what could be seen from roads were over.
Itâs illegal for able-bodied hunters to shoot big game from vehicles. The Wyoming Game and Fish Department issues special permits, allowing disabled hunters to shoot from vehicles.
So, for several years, Gay was limited to âroad huntingâ from friends' pickups. Â

A New Day For Disabled Hunters
His horizons recently broadened.
In 2024, Gay got an all-terrain, single person called a Coyote, made by the Outrider company of North Carolina.
Though itâs technically an âelectric wheelchair,â itâs really more of an off-road buggy, with four wheels, high clearance and aggressive tread on the tires, Gay said.
This past fall, he used it to hunt way back off the road, and to be picky about which mule deer buck he shot.
âOn day three of the hunt, I shot a wonderful buck mule deer, a five-by-five (five points on each side of the antlers),â he said.
Whatâs more, he quartered the deer and transported the meat out by himself.
âEverything you do if youâre fully physically capable, Iâm able to do with the Coyote,â he said.
As he sees it, equipment such as the Coyote, and other cutting-edge technology, is opening the doors wide for disabled hunters to go places and experience adventures that would have previously been impossible for them.
Heâs not alone in his optimism. Â
Randy Svalina of Laramie recently lost most of one of his legs, and initially went hunting on crutches, as he adjusted to a new prosthetic leg.
He told Cowboy State Daily that he and his doctor are hoping to redesign the prosthetic to double as a rifle rest. Â
Another disabled hunter, Idaho resident Tj Cartwright, was left totally blind by a bowhunting accident years ago.
He initially gave up on ever being able to hunt again. His father, a Wyoming resident, convinced him to try waterfowl hunting. Cartwright learned to shoot ducks and geese with a shotgun by zeroing in on the birdsâ sounds.
In the fall of 2024, with the aid of special devices that help an observer line up his rifle shots, he shot a white-tailed deer buck in Park County.
âI just want everybody to look past the disabilities and realize that itâs not right to think that they canât hunt. Just because you have a disability and do things a different way doesnât mean that you canât do it. Everybody deserves to be out there and to have fun,â he told Cowboy State Daily at the time.
It's Good For Walking To Dog Too
Gay said the Coyote is âcomputer-controlled,â and heâs set its maximum speed at 10 miles per hour.
Itâs probably capable of going much faster, but he doesnât want to risk flipping it if he ever has to take a sharp turn at high speed.
In addition to allowing him to hunt off-road, Gay said the Coyote is great for getting around town.
He has some special modifications on his buggy, including a rifle rest and a hitch for pulling a small trailer.
In town, the rifle rest âserves as a hook for my dogâs leash,â he said.
âI can hook the end of her leash on it and she is free to roam the entire length of her leash, without me having to use my hands, he said.
When heâs hunting, he hitches a small trailer to the Coyote, so he can transport big game quarters.
When thereâs snow in town, he hitches a sled to it and takes neighborhood kids for âsled rides,â he said.
Bird Hunting And Completing The âGrand Slamâ
With a new range of hunting opportunities open to him, Gay said heâd like to take the Coyote upland bird hunting.
âIâd love to try it on birds, if I had a bird dog with me. If a dog could locate a pheasant and go on point, I could have my shotgun at the ready, flush the pheasant on my terms, and harvest a pheasant,â he said.
A bigger ambition is to complete his hunts for the âgrand slamâ of all four North American bighorn sheep species.
Those include Dall Sheep, Stone Sheep, Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep (which Wyoming has) and desert bighorn sheep.
He got the first three species when he was still able-bodied, between 1981 and 2008.
And thatâs a good thing, because Dall sheep, Stone sheep and Rocky Mountain bighorns live in rugged, high mountain areas where even the Coyote canât go, he said.
Desert bighorns live in lower country, in the American Southwest, in places where it might be possible for Gay to get to them.
Heâs already prepared the Coyoteâs tires for traversing deserts.
âThe first thing I did when I got the Coyote was, I brought a gallon jug of green slime (internal tire protector) and pumped the tires full of green slime. So, catus spikes, goat heads and thorns donâtâ bother the machine,â he said.
Once A Bodybuilder
A close friend of Gay, Scott Weber of Cody, told Cowboy State Daily that heâs known Gay since the early 1970s, and can remember when he had an imposing physical presence.
âWe were dating the same girl and she said, 'You gotta meet this guy!' At that time Gerry was a bodybuilder and training night and day for Mr. Wyoming. He was eating only moose meat and he had zero body fat, ripped with big guns,â Weber told Cowboy State Daily.
Gay also had a fondness for firepower on a prairie dog hunt they took together with some other friends, Weber said. Â
âWe had .220 Swifts; Gerry brought a custom .458 mag (.458 Winchester Magnum) elephant rifle with 500-grain bullets. If he shot low on the dog, it took the whole mound out in a plume of dust,â Weber said.
âWe became Boone companions after that. He moved to Alaska in 1982 and used that big old gun on brownies (brown bears)," Weber added.
Although Gayâs physical prowess isnât what it once was, his spirit and love for hunting are as strong as ever, Weber said.
Access For All
Gay said that as he and other disabled hunters venture farther afield with new technology, theyâll probably add their voices to the push for better public access.
There are barbed wire fences on some public land parcels, and Gay said that even with his Coyote, the fences can block his passage.
That might run counter to the Unlawful Enclosures Act, he said. That act, established in the 1800s, states that access to public land canât be impeded.
âMan-made barriersâ on public land might also violate the Americans With Disabilities Act, Gay said.
As a longtime advocate of hunter access to public land, Gay said access for disabled hunters might spark new debates and legislative action.
âTimes are changing as the technology is changing,â he said.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





