Free: Contests & Raffles.
Most of the herd health consideration I read about for buck to doe ratio is for genetic variance and buck health pre and during the rut. So, that bucks don't kill themselves looking for every available doe in an extended rut, leaving unbred does or late drop fawns. The indians it sounds like are at least waiting post rut for hunting. As long as the next crops of fawns and smaller bucks are genetically linked to the migrators, then the herd health should be fine. Hunting all the big bucks pre and during the rut in large numbers is what should hurt herd health. Is that how anyone else has understood it?
Hell, all this talk about Entiat makes me curious about the place. Kinda country is it?
Well, if so many bucks are getting dropped after the main rut, seems like a doe doesn't have that much of a hard time getting bred. Grundy, if I recall correctly, didn't you say that there were 17 in your party? And 13 bulls killed? That's an awful lot of bull killing for one camp. How is your herd doing?
Quote from: MountainWalk on December 18, 2012, 11:17:19 PMWell, if so many bucks are getting dropped after the main rut, seems like a doe doesn't have that much of a hard time getting bred. Grundy, if I recall correctly, didn't you say that there were 17 in your party? And 13 bulls killed? That's an awful lot of bull killing for one camp. How is your herd doing?The difference here Mountainwalk is they are accounted for and have harvest limits set accordingly. Its obvious you have no problem with whats happening in Entiat and Swakane, you seem to be arguing the indians point to exhaustion, why not just come out and say it?
Except the bucks continue to rut in December, does that are not bred during the first estrus often times do again later.