Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: KFhunter on January 15, 2014, 10:03:51 PMoh ya! I guess you did, my apologies JLS. The boys in Montana would never SSS Maybe the do. I don't know anyone that has but I'm sure there are. Given the fact that hunters have only been killing about 150-200 wolves a year, I'm doubting that poachers are having all that significant of an impact on the wolves. Your conspiracy theory may vary.
oh ya! I guess you did, my apologies JLS. The boys in Montana would never SSS
For the record I find it interesting that some of you guys claim wolves don't decimate herds yet you acknowledge the need for aerial gunning of wolves.
Quote from: JLS on January 15, 2014, 10:07:42 PMQuote from: KFhunter on January 15, 2014, 10:03:51 PMoh ya! I guess you did, my apologies JLS. The boys in Montana would never SSS Maybe the do. I don't know anyone that has but I'm sure there are. Given the fact that hunters have only been killing about 150-200 wolves a year, I'm doubting that poachers are having all that significant of an impact on the wolves. Your conspiracy theory may vary.How would you know how many wolves have been poached? I would comment that many of those "wolf poachers" are likely good citizens on most other counts. It was the continued court battles that prevented wolf management and their love for Idaho wildlife that caused them to become vigilantes.I would suggest that the legal harvest is likely still not all inclusive of wolf harvest and yet Idaho still needs areal gunning to try and get wolf numbers under control.
Quote from: bearpaw on January 15, 2014, 11:19:06 PMQuote from: JLS on January 15, 2014, 10:07:42 PMQuote from: KFhunter on January 15, 2014, 10:03:51 PMoh ya! I guess you did, my apologies JLS. The boys in Montana would never SSS Maybe the do. I don't know anyone that has but I'm sure there are. Given the fact that hunters have only been killing about 150-200 wolves a year, I'm doubting that poachers are having all that significant of an impact on the wolves. Your conspiracy theory may vary.How would you know how many wolves have been poached? I would comment that many of those "wolf poachers" are likely good citizens on most other counts. It was the continued court battles that prevented wolf management and their love for Idaho wildlife that caused them to become vigilantes.I would suggest that the legal harvest is likely still not all inclusive of wolf harvest and yet Idaho still needs areal gunning to try and get wolf numbers under control.Washington is screwed. Liberal King CO. isn't going to tolerate helicopters gunning down wolves, we can't trap them or snare them, and hunting them in the brush is almost impossible on a scale that's needed to curb the population. I still haven't seen any ideas for WA wolf management where conflict dictates wolves need to be removed, or where large ungulates have declined too far.
Quote from: bearpaw on January 15, 2014, 11:07:35 PM For the record I find it interesting that some of you guys claim wolves don't decimate herds yet you acknowledge the need for aerial gunning of wolves. Yea, I find it interesting that you continue to distort intentionally or out of ignorance the opinions of people on this forum. I have not heard one person say wolf hunting is a bad thing. I agree there are specific areas where wolves need additional control actions. I do not subscribe to the mass hysteria that wolves will decimate all wildlife. Sorry, the world is not black and white where you can fit everybody into simple categories like "wolf lovers" or "wolf haters".
Quote from: AspenBud on January 15, 2014, 09:25:36 AMQuote from: KFhunter on January 14, 2014, 04:44:32 PMMuch like Yellowstone, the Bison and Elk will literally hug people and activity to get away from the wolves,Something tells me that's not why elk hang out around the country club in Longview, WA. Nor is it why people in Kentucky (where elk have no real predators, have a 92% calf survival rate and are about 15% bigger than their western counterparts) are starting to complain about elk invading their gardens and property.Nice try to distort this situation in Kentucky to try and say wolves are needed. But that's more wolf lover rubbish. All that Kentucky has to do is liberalize hunting seasons to control elk populations. Wolves are not needed.
Quote from: KFhunter on January 14, 2014, 04:44:32 PMMuch like Yellowstone, the Bison and Elk will literally hug people and activity to get away from the wolves,Something tells me that's not why elk hang out around the country club in Longview, WA. Nor is it why people in Kentucky (where elk have no real predators, have a 92% calf survival rate and are about 15% bigger than their western counterparts) are starting to complain about elk invading their gardens and property.
Much like Yellowstone, the Bison and Elk will literally hug people and activity to get away from the wolves,
Æ 2012: Idaho Fish and Game sold 80,577 elk tags, and hunters killed 16,418 elk — a 20 percent success rate. In 1996, 100,527 hunters had a 25 percent success rate.
Wolves need to be managed and citizens need to be able to protect themselves and their property.