Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: uplandhunter870 on April 04, 2013, 11:24:55 AMQuote from: Curly on April 04, 2013, 11:03:17 AMThe way it reads is that an applicant is required to have: 1) HS degree or GED and 2) Associates Degree in wildlife or fisheries and 3) 6 mo's min experience in trappingmy bad, thanks for the correction CurlyNo problem. I still think it is good that you applied even if you don't meet all their minimum quals. You never know how many applicants they will get and their qualifications are. You at least have a shot if you apply. I hope you get it.
Quote from: Curly on April 04, 2013, 11:03:17 AMThe way it reads is that an applicant is required to have: 1) HS degree or GED and 2) Associates Degree in wildlife or fisheries and 3) 6 mo's min experience in trappingmy bad, thanks for the correction Curly
The way it reads is that an applicant is required to have: 1) HS degree or GED and 2) Associates Degree in wildlife or fisheries and 3) 6 mo's min experience in trapping
Quote from: Humptulips on April 04, 2013, 12:57:11 PMQuote from: uplandhunter870 on April 04, 2013, 08:39:06 AMQuote from: Humptulips on April 03, 2013, 11:10:44 PMQuote from: uplandhunter870 on April 03, 2013, 04:06:37 PMQuote from: bobcat on April 03, 2013, 03:04:15 PMIt would be a great "foot in the door" type of job. Not only that, but you'd be getting paid to have fun. It would be like getting paid to go hunting.I hope you at least get an interview. Unfortunately, I bet competition for the job will be fierce.it would be a great opprotunity, politics aside i would not mind making a career out of dfw, and yeah it would be awesome to get paid to do catch and release hunting all summer long. yeah i bet they get a couple hundred apps the position is taking apps until the 10th im kind of hoping that my background in GIS and GPS gains me a few ladder rungs but i got a feeling that cover letter thing is going to be the death of my application. outdoor skills are pretty easily taught compared to data analysis, i already know how to hunt and track animals (decently) learning to shoot a tranq gun or set a trap wouldnt be all that difficult.There's the problem right there. See this all the time "Anybody can set a trap, easy peasy" Always voiced by someone that has never trapped.Trapping wolves especially is not easy. There are very few that are actually good at it and to start from scratch it'll probably take longer to get good at it then to get your Phd in wolfology at Evergreen.so enlighten me how much more difficult setting a trap is than earning a BS degree. trapping anything is not easy (ever been out played by mice around the house and have the peanut butter stolen but no dead mouse?) and how is a guy supposed to learn how to trap wolves when wolves are a federally protected and listed species Learning how to trap the wolves is part of on the job training and is the easy thing to learn how to do, yeah successfully capturing a wolf alive and unharmed may be difficult but learning how to do so isnt all that difficult especially for anyone that has any decent amount of experience in the outdoors. if my old man could teach himself how to trap when he was a teenager by reading books and magazines like fur fish and game, im sure i could do the exact same. have you meet some of the people the state hires for jobs like this? not exactly Einstein like rocket scientistsTo begin with wolves are not a federally listed species through out their range. If you have some experience trapping them in AK, ID or MT so much the better but your attitude implies I'll just go out and learn. That will take time and in the meantime you are not going to be catching wolves if that is your job. In fact you will probably be educating them about traps which will make it all the more difficult.Go take some, one on one training in the field from an experienced wolf trapper but don't think for one minute that qualifies you as a wolf trapper. Time and experience might make you a good one.There is a big difference between trapping a mouse or beaver and muskrats or even coyotes and going after wolves.Coyotes are generally considered to be the toughest to trap in the lower 48 and there are a ton of guys chasing them but there are damn few ever get to be really good at it. Wolves are a step up from there. You'll learn but the first lesson will be how little you know.I think with tracking collars (enable patterning) and trapping near denning sites early summer pretty much anyone could do it with basic trapping knowledge No it wouldn't make a good "fair chase" trapper, but it'd suffice for WDFW's purpose.
Quote from: uplandhunter870 on April 04, 2013, 08:39:06 AMQuote from: Humptulips on April 03, 2013, 11:10:44 PMQuote from: uplandhunter870 on April 03, 2013, 04:06:37 PMQuote from: bobcat on April 03, 2013, 03:04:15 PMIt would be a great "foot in the door" type of job. Not only that, but you'd be getting paid to have fun. It would be like getting paid to go hunting.I hope you at least get an interview. Unfortunately, I bet competition for the job will be fierce.it would be a great opprotunity, politics aside i would not mind making a career out of dfw, and yeah it would be awesome to get paid to do catch and release hunting all summer long. yeah i bet they get a couple hundred apps the position is taking apps until the 10th im kind of hoping that my background in GIS and GPS gains me a few ladder rungs but i got a feeling that cover letter thing is going to be the death of my application. outdoor skills are pretty easily taught compared to data analysis, i already know how to hunt and track animals (decently) learning to shoot a tranq gun or set a trap wouldnt be all that difficult.There's the problem right there. See this all the time "Anybody can set a trap, easy peasy" Always voiced by someone that has never trapped.Trapping wolves especially is not easy. There are very few that are actually good at it and to start from scratch it'll probably take longer to get good at it then to get your Phd in wolfology at Evergreen.so enlighten me how much more difficult setting a trap is than earning a BS degree. trapping anything is not easy (ever been out played by mice around the house and have the peanut butter stolen but no dead mouse?) and how is a guy supposed to learn how to trap wolves when wolves are a federally protected and listed species Learning how to trap the wolves is part of on the job training and is the easy thing to learn how to do, yeah successfully capturing a wolf alive and unharmed may be difficult but learning how to do so isnt all that difficult especially for anyone that has any decent amount of experience in the outdoors. if my old man could teach himself how to trap when he was a teenager by reading books and magazines like fur fish and game, im sure i could do the exact same. have you meet some of the people the state hires for jobs like this? not exactly Einstein like rocket scientistsTo begin with wolves are not a federally listed species through out their range. If you have some experience trapping them in AK, ID or MT so much the better but your attitude implies I'll just go out and learn. That will take time and in the meantime you are not going to be catching wolves if that is your job. In fact you will probably be educating them about traps which will make it all the more difficult.Go take some, one on one training in the field from an experienced wolf trapper but don't think for one minute that qualifies you as a wolf trapper. Time and experience might make you a good one.There is a big difference between trapping a mouse or beaver and muskrats or even coyotes and going after wolves.Coyotes are generally considered to be the toughest to trap in the lower 48 and there are a ton of guys chasing them but there are damn few ever get to be really good at it. Wolves are a step up from there. You'll learn but the first lesson will be how little you know.
Quote from: Humptulips on April 03, 2013, 11:10:44 PMQuote from: uplandhunter870 on April 03, 2013, 04:06:37 PMQuote from: bobcat on April 03, 2013, 03:04:15 PMIt would be a great "foot in the door" type of job. Not only that, but you'd be getting paid to have fun. It would be like getting paid to go hunting.I hope you at least get an interview. Unfortunately, I bet competition for the job will be fierce.it would be a great opprotunity, politics aside i would not mind making a career out of dfw, and yeah it would be awesome to get paid to do catch and release hunting all summer long. yeah i bet they get a couple hundred apps the position is taking apps until the 10th im kind of hoping that my background in GIS and GPS gains me a few ladder rungs but i got a feeling that cover letter thing is going to be the death of my application. outdoor skills are pretty easily taught compared to data analysis, i already know how to hunt and track animals (decently) learning to shoot a tranq gun or set a trap wouldnt be all that difficult.There's the problem right there. See this all the time "Anybody can set a trap, easy peasy" Always voiced by someone that has never trapped.Trapping wolves especially is not easy. There are very few that are actually good at it and to start from scratch it'll probably take longer to get good at it then to get your Phd in wolfology at Evergreen.so enlighten me how much more difficult setting a trap is than earning a BS degree. trapping anything is not easy (ever been out played by mice around the house and have the peanut butter stolen but no dead mouse?) and how is a guy supposed to learn how to trap wolves when wolves are a federally protected and listed species Learning how to trap the wolves is part of on the job training and is the easy thing to learn how to do, yeah successfully capturing a wolf alive and unharmed may be difficult but learning how to do so isnt all that difficult especially for anyone that has any decent amount of experience in the outdoors. if my old man could teach himself how to trap when he was a teenager by reading books and magazines like fur fish and game, im sure i could do the exact same. have you meet some of the people the state hires for jobs like this? not exactly Einstein like rocket scientists
Quote from: uplandhunter870 on April 03, 2013, 04:06:37 PMQuote from: bobcat on April 03, 2013, 03:04:15 PMIt would be a great "foot in the door" type of job. Not only that, but you'd be getting paid to have fun. It would be like getting paid to go hunting.I hope you at least get an interview. Unfortunately, I bet competition for the job will be fierce.it would be a great opprotunity, politics aside i would not mind making a career out of dfw, and yeah it would be awesome to get paid to do catch and release hunting all summer long. yeah i bet they get a couple hundred apps the position is taking apps until the 10th im kind of hoping that my background in GIS and GPS gains me a few ladder rungs but i got a feeling that cover letter thing is going to be the death of my application. outdoor skills are pretty easily taught compared to data analysis, i already know how to hunt and track animals (decently) learning to shoot a tranq gun or set a trap wouldnt be all that difficult.There's the problem right there. See this all the time "Anybody can set a trap, easy peasy" Always voiced by someone that has never trapped.Trapping wolves especially is not easy. There are very few that are actually good at it and to start from scratch it'll probably take longer to get good at it then to get your Phd in wolfology at Evergreen.
Quote from: bobcat on April 03, 2013, 03:04:15 PMIt would be a great "foot in the door" type of job. Not only that, but you'd be getting paid to have fun. It would be like getting paid to go hunting.I hope you at least get an interview. Unfortunately, I bet competition for the job will be fierce.it would be a great opprotunity, politics aside i would not mind making a career out of dfw, and yeah it would be awesome to get paid to do catch and release hunting all summer long. yeah i bet they get a couple hundred apps the position is taking apps until the 10th im kind of hoping that my background in GIS and GPS gains me a few ladder rungs but i got a feeling that cover letter thing is going to be the death of my application. outdoor skills are pretty easily taught compared to data analysis, i already know how to hunt and track animals (decently) learning to shoot a tranq gun or set a trap wouldnt be all that difficult.
It would be a great "foot in the door" type of job. Not only that, but you'd be getting paid to have fun. It would be like getting paid to go hunting.I hope you at least get an interview. Unfortunately, I bet competition for the job will be fierce.
One of the new hires for the wolf tracking collaring, not sure what his title is, program came out of the Cat project, a cougar study that took place Kittitas County, and ended a few years ago, the study focused on locating cougars, tranquilizing them taking a tooth sample, blood, weight, vital measurements, sex, and fitting them with tracking collars, the program lasted for around 10 years and was a joint effort with Cle Elum Roslyn Middle School, 8th grade students got to take part along with a few chosen parents to participate, it showed each cats home range through gps way point marking every day or so, I'm not sure, the map provided the department with good information on how male and female cats ranges overlapped, My guess would be that wildlife heads would hire out of the many qualified folks with a proven track record with in there already existing pool of potential hires.
I would think that if they were "serious" about actually trapping wolves they would hire an experienced done as a consultant, to educate the wet behind the ears bios and such how to do it/ do it for them. to me this is just a another "going through the motions" to appease the hunters.