Free: Contests & Raffles.
I wasn't at the meeting and won't even try to speak to it. However, your continued assertion that the motive for increasing elk harvest in other areas was to hide or mask the affect of wolves is patently false. I will again refer you to the 2003 legislation in MT that directed FWP to reduce elk numbers in many elk management units. Debbie Barrett out of Dillon was the sponsor.Data can be skewed in many ways to say what you want it to say. All things must be taken in context, or else one can easily be misled. I would certainly agree that simply focusing on statewide elk harvest is not an accurate indicator of the impact that wolves may have on localized hunter harvest.
First of all that RED is an obnioxious color to read can you tone it to say a more readable color. Thanks. The State will and has jumbled the numbers as they have already done in the past
Specifically at the Colville meeting the WDFW presented a graph which depicted elk harvest in Idaho as steady indicating ungulates were not affected much by wolves. I challenged their graph, Idaho and Montana increased harvest in other areas to hide the impacts of wolves and I mentioned the Lolo, Bitterroot, Yellowstone, Payette, and other impacted herds. It is a fact that more elk are being harvested in areas unaffected by wolves in Montana and Idaho. I suppose I cannot prove that was their purpose of increasing harvest in unaffected areas, but the end affect is exactly as I specified. On a statewide harvest level it gives the appearance that wolves do not impact harvest, but the truth is that local harvest levels have been severely impacted.MFWP completely shut down most of the Yellowstone late hunts due to a lack of elk and harvest has dropped in other wolf affected areas. The seasons have been greatly reduced in affected areas in Idaho and more harvest is coming from unaffected areas. So it was very misleading for WDFW to show a graph indicating there were little impacts caused by wolves.It was especially frustrating for everyone who had to sit there and listen to irrelevant data from all over the state of WA when we were all there to hear what WDFW was going to do to protect ungulate herds in NE WA. Definitely a poor excuse for a dog and pony show. As someone else mentioned, WDFW has already started increasing other permits and seasons in other areas. This will hide the low harvest in NE WA when you compare year to year harvest on a statewide level.
I would like to see this agent of a dishonest government agency take a lie detector test that he honestly can determine this is not in fact a wolf kill.
Quote from: Wenatcheejay on March 30, 2013, 11:03:58 AM I would like to see this agent of a dishonest government agency take a lie detector test that he honestly can determine this is not in fact a wolf kill. I could be wrong but I don't think they ever make a statement that concludes its not a wolf kill, rather they leave themselves a out by saying "they can't confirm it is a wolf kill". It's politics pure and simple, a play on words that leaves them wiggle room in either direction.
My opinion, for what its worth. I dont believe too much of what the department claims, and zero when it comes to the topic of wolves. Just looking at the pictures of the cow..why does there need to be punctures and bone crushing bites to the carcass for it to be a wolf? Yes, they kill that way, but they also run the animal to exhaustion, move in and hamstring, then open the bowels and begin feeding as the animal slowly dies. Look at the rear right hoof/pastern of the cow killed. Typical of a hamstring wound.. my 2 cents