Free: Contests & Raffles.
How about the forest service get to logging some of our ground again especially in the lewis and wind river, and packwood units, then maybe they would have a little better carrying capacity as it is, the national forest are all but dead to elk and deer as far as I am concerned.
Mounted uterus's look good also, I have 2 mounted on the wall......
Quote from: logger on November 22, 2012, 08:59:21 AMHow about the forest service get to logging some of our ground again especially in the lewis and wind river, and packwood units, then maybe they would have a little better carrying capacity as it is, the national forest are all but dead to elk and deer as far as I am concerned.Very wise words! Would help so much in so any ways!
SI Eagle.I would think that this would qualify as starving...would you not? This Winston January cow did not have any fat on it and it was losing muscle mass. These photos show where a tender backstrap should have been. Not a mass of sinew and stringy muscle.I think you left out the picture of the hoof rot that cow had. I believe when you posted that last it had hoof rot. I will give you the hoof rot and what that is doing to the herd. I can't give you starving. They have plenty of habitat and feed in the Winston and no elk need to be fed or are starving. Between hoof rot and cow tags the herd is in bad shape. The fact is, most of the Winston cannot carry this many elk for much longer. The bubble has burst and it will never be the same again.
SI, since it seems you have it all figured out............what causes the hoof rot?
Quote from: actionshooter on November 23, 2012, 10:17:25 AMSI, since it seems you have it all figured out............what causes the hoof rot?Not sure but it certainly isn't starvation.