A gigantic bull elk, called âSplit 5,â hailed as the king of the Estes Park, Colorado, herd, was reportedly legally killed by a hunter, leaving his fans mourning.
The bull was apparently shot during Coloradoâs fall hunting season. After the news broke this week that Split 5 was gone, social media lit up with tributes to the legendary bull.
Wildlife photographer and hunter Shane Paul of Cheyenne was a close follower of the Split 5 bull, which was also called Atlas.
He frequently traveled to Colorado to watch and photograph Split 5.
He told Cowboy State Daily that he had mixed feelings about news of the bullâs death.
âAs a hunter, if he was legally harvested, Iâm 100% supportive of it. But itâs still hard for me, because he was so well-known,â he said.

A Colorado Elk Herd With Wyoming Roots
Split 5 was a dominant bull in elk herd that lives in and near Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado.
Each spring and fall, the herd migrates and essentially takes over the town of Estes Park.
The herd has Wyoming DNA. It descended from elk transplanted from Wyoming in the 1900s, when Colorado had almost no elk left.
âIn 1916, Colorado imported 50 elk from Wyoming to re-establish dwindling herds,â according to Colorado Park and Wildlife (CPW).
âThe elk were transported and released in Idaho Springs and the Greenhorn Mountains in Pueblo County. From these limited transplants, and through decades of trapping and relocation efforts by wildlife managers, elk populations have soared to the abundant herds for which Colorado is now famous,â according to CPW.
Colorado now has more elk than any other state with an estimated 280,000 to 300,000.
As in Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks, hunting is forbidden inside Rocky Mountain National Park.
Paul said itâs thought Split 5 must have wandered outside the boundaries of the park and been shot during one of Coloradoâs elk hunting seasons this fall.
Nobody is sure exactly when and where Split 5 was shot, or who the hunter was, Paul said.
And he doesnât blame the hunter for laying low.
âKnowing how well-known Split 5 was, if I were the hunter I would never share pictures, because youâd become a public enemy,â he said.

Whatâs In The Name
âSplit 5â refers to unusual growth in the bullâs antlers, Paul said. There was a split in the bullâs G5, or the fifth point branching off his main antler beams.
The bullâs size was truly remarkable.
âHe had to have been a 400-class bull,â Paul said.
Thatâs a reference to the Boone and Crockett measuring system for big game trophies. A compilation of measurements, in inches, is taken from several points along the animalâs antlers, then the numbers are crunched into a final score.
Bulls in the 400-inch range are about as gigantic as elk can get naturally. Only captive animals that are fed artificial supplements get bigger than that.
The hunter that shot Split 5 didnât get the full effect of the bullâs trophy potential Paul said.
This year, the bullâs antlers were broken off in a few places. It was âbattle damageâ from fights with other bulls during the elk rut, or mating season, he said.

âThank You, Split 5â
From a conservation point of view, Split 5âs death is hardly tragic, Paul said.
The bull was thought to be 13 years old, and elk rarely live past 15 in the wild, he said.
So, Split 5 was well past his prime and had already spread his superior genes, Paul said.
During the rut, it wasnât unusual to see Split 5 with a harem of dozens of cow elk, so he must have countless offspring amid the Estes Park herd, Paul said.
One of Split 5âs favorite hangouts was a field in front of the Estes Park YMCA.
Paul recalls one time, he parked his Chevrolet Suburban in one of the last remaining pullouts at the YMCA, as a crowd had gathered to admire Split 5 and his harem.
His Suburban is custom-made to accommodate a wheelchair. Paul was in an UTV rollover crash during a 2021 hunting trip, which left him quadriplegic, with only limited use of his arms.
That hasnât stopped him from continuing to enjoy hunting and wildlife photography.
That day in Estes Park, Split 5 decided to go for a walk, and ended up having to squeeze past Paulâs Suburban to get into some timber.
The bullâs antlers were so huge, they didnât quite fit.
âI could hear them, the whole way down my Suburban, âclank, clank, clankâ against the glass,â he said.
Paul was worried Split 5 would shatter the glass, but he didnât.
Instead, he left a single dent in the vehicleâs side.
As tribute to the bull, Paul plans to get a decal to place over the dent.
âThe sticker can read, âThank you, Split 5,ââ he said.
Contact Mark Heinz at mark@cowboystatedaily.com

Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





