Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: kentrek on April 20, 2013, 03:13:15 PMQuote from: trophyhunt on April 20, 2013, 03:07:21 PMI can't seem to come up with my percentage of drawing, can someone help me with this? 9,176 names in the hat I have 289 of them, with 2 tags given out. Should be simple but I just can't figure it out. The other tag has 3,462 names in the hat, 289 of them are mine also with just 2 tags. Thanks6.299% for the first and 16.69 % for the second Pretty damn sad when you see the real odds, guys with that many points probably think they have a much better chance than they really do. Even if you add more permits it still doesn't increase much.
Quote from: trophyhunt on April 20, 2013, 03:07:21 PMI can't seem to come up with my percentage of drawing, can someone help me with this? 9,176 names in the hat I have 289 of them, with 2 tags given out. Should be simple but I just can't figure it out. The other tag has 3,462 names in the hat, 289 of them are mine also with just 2 tags. Thanks6.299% for the first and 16.69 % for the second
I can't seem to come up with my percentage of drawing, can someone help me with this? 9,176 names in the hat I have 289 of them, with 2 tags given out. Should be simple but I just can't figure it out. The other tag has 3,462 names in the hat, 289 of them are mine also with just 2 tags. Thanks
[your points^2/((average points^2)*number of applicants)]*number of tags*100 = % odds
Quote[your points^2/((average points^2)*number of applicants)]*number of tags*100 = % oddsIt's unfortunately not quite that simple.Think of flipping a coin and wanting to get heads. If you flip it once, your chance of getting heads is 50%. If you flip it twice, your chance of getting at least one head is not 50% x 2. It is 75%. If you flip it five times, it is still not 100% (it is actually about 97%). Here's the best way to do it. First, compute the odds of NOT drawing. Your odds of NOT drawing is one minus your odds of drawing. In your example, the odds of drawing is 289 / 9176 or .0314. Your odds of NOT drawing is therefore .9685. Your odds of NOT drawing the second tag is also roughly .9685 (I'll explain in a moment why that is not entirely true.). Now the easy part: your odds of NOT drawing the first and second tags is .9685 x 9685 or .938. If there are more than two tags, then the odds would be .9685 raised to the power of the number of tags. If your odds of NOT drawing either tag is .938, then your odds of drawing at least one is 1 - .938 = .0619 or 6.19%.Here is why this is not precise, and why the true odds cannot be computed exactly. When the first tag is drawn, the number of names left in the hat is no longer 9176. How many less? That depends on who was drawn. If the person drawn had 1 point, then there's just one less name in the hat. If the person drawn had 10 points, then the number of names in the hat would be 100 less. Thus your odds on each subsequent draw improve, but by how much depends on who is drawn and you cannot predict that.It's tough to write a math formula with letters and characters, but here's an attempt:Y = Your pointsT = Total names in the hat (which equals total applications x average points per application)N = Total permits availableOdds = 1 - { [1-(Y^2)/(A^2) ] ^ N }
Wow that is completely Chinese to me, when I was in high school the highest math they required was pre-algebra and I graduated in 87'. Thanks for your help guys, kentrek, I saw your post on odds, that was very impressive. Thanks again, now I'm really confused on what to apply for.
Not the mathematically less inclined, here's a simple formula for Blue Mountains draw odds: "slim and none".
Quote from: Bob33 on April 20, 2013, 04:58:59 PMNot the mathematically less inclined, here's a simple formula for Blue Mountains draw odds: "slim and none".Technically Bob, it's slim and slimmer
To circle back to the original thread: why has there been such a significant drop in permits?Does this not come as a surprise to anyone?
To accommodate larger elk and deer losses from wolves, reductions in antlerless take and perhaps other restrictions such as shortened hunting seasons or reduced availability of special permits may be needed in some areas where wolves become common.
The presence of wolves may provide an additional benefit for some hunters by enhancing their overall hunting experience. The possibility of seeing or hearing wolves, finding wolf tracks or a wolf kill, or hunting among wolves could give considerable enjoyment to these hunters.