A Kentucky trophy hunter who sparked global outrage after posing gleefully with a slain giraffe in 2017 spoke out for the first time in her own defense Friday, but she appeared to shoot herself in the foot by raising new questions about what she called a beneficial “harvest.”

In an interview on “CBS This Morning,” 38-year-old Tess Talley described the 2017 South Africa hunt as an environmental effort, but a photo that went viral in 2018 that showed her holding a firearm and grinning in front of the carcass prompted a backlash.

Talley used the skin of the giraffe to cover a gun case and throw pillows, which she said “everybody loves.”

“He was delicious,” she said. “He really was. Not only was he beautiful and majestic, he was good. And we all take pictures with our harvest. That’s what we do. That’s what they’ve always done. There’s nothing wrong with that.”

The picture caught fire on social media after it was resurfaced and shared on Twitter by digital news outlet Africlandpost. It was then retweeted more than 48,000 times with a caption berating Talley as a “white American savage” and a “neanderthal.”