Free: Contests & Raffles.
For having over 10 points myself, I say sure....offer up 60% of the tags to those that qualify.However, once I draw a tag....bye bye Washington. I'll move onto to a different state and wouldn't waste my time with Washington Draws.
Skywalker.As long as so many people are applying for so few permits, but in so many categories- the system will be screwed. While it may be a partial solution to award a % of tags to those with 10 pts and more, I think that is basically what is happening most of the time anyway. Sure, someone with 1 pt gets lucky once in awhile, but most of the highest demand tags are going to those with higher points (I know you can get pts to draw info on the wdfw website somewhere). You would soon have just as many people complaining that they can't get drawn with 10 or more points anyway.And the scarey thing is (as has already been stated) this present system was a fix that was supposedly asked for and supported by license holders
There is no perfect draw system. I would just like them to place more emphasize on the high point holders. Does not seem very fair for a guy to apply year after year to not be drawn with 23 points. Yet a guy with 3 points gets drawn. I don't care how they do it, just break it up a bit or change the odds.
In nine years of applying in Oregon I have went on two eastside limited entry bull hunts. And the best thing was I pretty much knew which year I would draw.
QuoteIn nine years of applying in Oregon I have went on two eastside limited entry bull hunts. And the best thing was I pretty much knew which year I would draw.That's because they don't have a general season in those units. If Washington did away with the general season, the number of permits would increase, and you would draw every 2 to 3 years. Just like Oregon. But you couldn't hunt every year. Most people don't want to give up their annual elk hunt.
Quote from: bobcat on February 15, 2013, 10:57:29 PMQuoteIn nine years of applying in Oregon I have went on two eastside limited entry bull hunts. And the best thing was I pretty much knew which year I would draw.That's because they don't have a general season in those units. If Washington did away with the general season, the number of permits would increase, and you would draw every 2 to 3 years. Just like Oregon. But you couldn't hunt every year. Most people don't want to give up their annual elk hunt.Actually there is a second season spike only hunt which I believe is general. My hunts were any bull.
Quote from: bobcat on February 15, 2013, 04:41:03 PMSkywalker, no thanks. I'd rather see it simplified instead of made more complicated.I don't see how taking a percentage of permits and setting them aside for high point holders is all that complicated. Everything about the system would stay the same. Just pull a percentage of hunts and reserve them for the high point holders. Not that complicated.
Skywalker, no thanks. I'd rather see it simplified instead of made more complicated.
Quote from: elksnout on February 15, 2013, 11:01:41 PMQuote from: bobcat on February 15, 2013, 10:57:29 PMQuoteIn nine years of applying in Oregon I have went on two eastside limited entry bull hunts. And the best thing was I pretty much knew which year I would draw.That's because they don't have a general season in those units. If Washington did away with the general season, the number of permits would increase, and you would draw every 2 to 3 years. Just like Oregon. But you couldn't hunt every year. Most people don't want to give up their annual elk hunt.Actually there is a second season spike only hunt which I believe is general. My hunts were any bull.Okay, I know they do have a few units open for spike only in eastern Oregon, but the majority of it is draw only. This allows for a lot more draw permits and makes for some relatively easy to draw hunts. Not only that but Oregon is much bigger than Washington with a whole lot more public land, AND less people. The point is, your comparing apples to oranges. Oregon is simply a better state for elk hunting. It's not the draw system that makes it that way.
Quote from: boneaddict on February 14, 2013, 11:32:28 AMWant to really increase your odds, change OIL back to fronting your app. $2500 a pop. They hold onto it until June and issue a refund, all but $50 fee. They get interest off of all of it. Be serious or need not apply. This letting everyone have a shot at 7 bucks a pop, you will be LUCKY if its OIL.I don't disagree with fronting, but I do disagree with fronting $2500. Front the money it costs to buy the tag. People who don't have that kind of expendable cash should not be penalized and not be able to apply. I know I wouldn't have that money to tie up.
Want to really increase your odds, change OIL back to fronting your app. $2500 a pop. They hold onto it until June and issue a refund, all but $50 fee. They get interest off of all of it. Be serious or need not apply. This letting everyone have a shot at 7 bucks a pop, you will be LUCKY if its OIL.
QuoteThere is no perfect draw system. I would just like them to place more emphasize on the high point holders. Does not seem very fair for a guy to apply year after year to not be drawn with 23 points. Yet a guy with 3 points gets drawn. I don't care how they do it, just break it up a bit or change the odds.The system already does what you're talking about. Those with the most points have a much greater chance of being drawn. With each point increase, your odds go up exponentially. There's no reason to change that part of the system. The mathematics of it work just as designed.If you think about it, a person applying for the first time has 1 point. That puts their "name in the hat" 1 time. A person who has applied and not drawn for 10 years, has 10 points, and their name goes in the hat 100 times. So that person has a 100 times greater chance of being drawn than the person applying for the first time.