Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: KFhunter on May 19, 2014, 02:25:14 PMfast forward 10-15 years.....Who will be vindicated? Wolfbait or Idahohunter?OH another Poll idea!Every time I think you can't possibly come up with a dumber post...
fast forward 10-15 years.....Who will be vindicated? Wolfbait or Idahohunter?OH another Poll idea!
Quote from: CAMPMEAT on May 19, 2014, 04:30:22 PMQuote from: idahohuntr on May 19, 2014, 11:46:07 AMQuote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 11:35:09 AM A new WDFW warden showed up and we had a little discussion about wolves and where they came from, I think he left with a few more ideas other then the BS he was told to say. For all of you who report wolves and wonder why WDFW has a hard time taking many of them seriously...it is because of people like wolfbait that they have to listen to rant every darn day that are clueless and full of government conspiracies. So...if we can get the wolfbaits of the world to keep their crazy to themselves it can only help. I know wolfbait personally and believe him more that your liberal rearend. Guys like you don't want to believe the truth for your own agenda........typical !I'm not attacking any one person. But unfortunately, idahohuntr has a point. The more people rant and rave every time and blah blah, you get written off as the crazy guy, and people stop listening to you. At times it can be very hard to be calm, but if you blow up and make yourself look like the pissed off guy, you will basically lose any type of reputation/respect from whatever agency you deal with.You'd be hard pressed to find any government department (anything from the local sewer district to FBI) who knows when certain people call it's going to be a rant and rave and your going to hang up your phone and do nothing regarding what they were saying, every department has "those people."
Quote from: idahohuntr on May 19, 2014, 11:46:07 AMQuote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 11:35:09 AM A new WDFW warden showed up and we had a little discussion about wolves and where they came from, I think he left with a few more ideas other then the BS he was told to say. For all of you who report wolves and wonder why WDFW has a hard time taking many of them seriously...it is because of people like wolfbait that they have to listen to rant every darn day that are clueless and full of government conspiracies. So...if we can get the wolfbaits of the world to keep their crazy to themselves it can only help. I know wolfbait personally and believe him more that your liberal rearend. Guys like you don't want to believe the truth for your own agenda........typical !
Quote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 11:35:09 AM A new WDFW warden showed up and we had a little discussion about wolves and where they came from, I think he left with a few more ideas other then the BS he was told to say. For all of you who report wolves and wonder why WDFW has a hard time taking many of them seriously...it is because of people like wolfbait that they have to listen to rant every darn day that are clueless and full of government conspiracies. So...if we can get the wolfbaits of the world to keep their crazy to themselves it can only help.
A new WDFW warden showed up and we had a little discussion about wolves and where they came from, I think he left with a few more ideas other then the BS he was told to say.
Quote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 09:01:16 AMIf it went to federal court in Spokane County hard to say what would happen, but I think it's a state issue in Stevens County due to the delisting of eastern WA. If it went to court in Stevens County we all know what the court results will likely be. Too many residents have been told "it's only coyotes" to get a conviction of wrong doing on that here in my opinion. Although wolves in Stevens County are no longer listed under the ESA a potential federal case could happen. If you shot a wolf on federal lands it could go to federal court, if you shot a wolf on non-federal lands but then transported it across federal lands (say shot it in your buddy's pasture and you have to get to USFS lands to get home) you could be charged under the Lacey Act in federal court, or of course if you transported the dead wolf across the state/international border.Now as far as the court in Stevens County. Under state law if a county prosecutor fails to act then the WDFW Commission can request the Attorney General's Office essentially step in and prosecute the case. This is very rare, but you can imagine it wouldn't be that unfeasible for a case involving a state endangered species.
If it went to federal court in Spokane County hard to say what would happen, but I think it's a state issue in Stevens County due to the delisting of eastern WA. If it went to court in Stevens County we all know what the court results will likely be. Too many residents have been told "it's only coyotes" to get a conviction of wrong doing on that here in my opinion.
Quote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 09:08:00 AMQuote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 09:01:16 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 06:21:01 AMQuote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 06:13:16 AMQuote from: rasbo on May 19, 2014, 04:07:50 AMI watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "Never, would be your correct answer, Rasbo. WDFW won't even admit they have a bear/cougar problem. Remember Oregon and WA came out with the first wolf pack in 70 years the very same day, Oregon's wolves showed up in the middle of cattle country and look at ODFG and the USFWS's record of confirming livestock kills,, and then look at WDFW. As pitiful as ODFG confirmed wolf kills are, WDFW is far worse.They can admit they have a problem with bear and cougars all they want, but the citizens of this state tied their hands. What part of the initiative process don't you understand?Actually that's not very true at all. The voters only tied WDFW hands on hounds and baiting. The WDFW themselves have limited boot hunting of cougars to ridiculously low quota levels in most units that need twice as many cougar taken. WDFW has full control of bear seasons and could easily harvest more bear in every unit if they desired. The high numbers of bear and cougar are definitely the product of WDFW policy. You and I both know the best way to reduce bear and cougar numbers is with hounds. Even with increased harvests hunters are at a disadvantage in this state.Again not correct. WDFW purposefully limited boot hunting of cougar because they said too many cougars were being taken. They also have limited bear seasons in areas where they wanted more bear.
Quote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 09:01:16 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 06:21:01 AMQuote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 06:13:16 AMQuote from: rasbo on May 19, 2014, 04:07:50 AMI watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "Never, would be your correct answer, Rasbo. WDFW won't even admit they have a bear/cougar problem. Remember Oregon and WA came out with the first wolf pack in 70 years the very same day, Oregon's wolves showed up in the middle of cattle country and look at ODFG and the USFWS's record of confirming livestock kills,, and then look at WDFW. As pitiful as ODFG confirmed wolf kills are, WDFW is far worse.They can admit they have a problem with bear and cougars all they want, but the citizens of this state tied their hands. What part of the initiative process don't you understand?Actually that's not very true at all. The voters only tied WDFW hands on hounds and baiting. The WDFW themselves have limited boot hunting of cougars to ridiculously low quota levels in most units that need twice as many cougar taken. WDFW has full control of bear seasons and could easily harvest more bear in every unit if they desired. The high numbers of bear and cougar are definitely the product of WDFW policy. You and I both know the best way to reduce bear and cougar numbers is with hounds. Even with increased harvests hunters are at a disadvantage in this state.
Quote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 06:21:01 AMQuote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 06:13:16 AMQuote from: rasbo on May 19, 2014, 04:07:50 AMI watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "Never, would be your correct answer, Rasbo. WDFW won't even admit they have a bear/cougar problem. Remember Oregon and WA came out with the first wolf pack in 70 years the very same day, Oregon's wolves showed up in the middle of cattle country and look at ODFG and the USFWS's record of confirming livestock kills,, and then look at WDFW. As pitiful as ODFG confirmed wolf kills are, WDFW is far worse.They can admit they have a problem with bear and cougars all they want, but the citizens of this state tied their hands. What part of the initiative process don't you understand?Actually that's not very true at all. The voters only tied WDFW hands on hounds and baiting. The WDFW themselves have limited boot hunting of cougars to ridiculously low quota levels in most units that need twice as many cougar taken. WDFW has full control of bear seasons and could easily harvest more bear in every unit if they desired. The high numbers of bear and cougar are definitely the product of WDFW policy.
Quote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 06:13:16 AMQuote from: rasbo on May 19, 2014, 04:07:50 AMI watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "Never, would be your correct answer, Rasbo. WDFW won't even admit they have a bear/cougar problem. Remember Oregon and WA came out with the first wolf pack in 70 years the very same day, Oregon's wolves showed up in the middle of cattle country and look at ODFG and the USFWS's record of confirming livestock kills,, and then look at WDFW. As pitiful as ODFG confirmed wolf kills are, WDFW is far worse.They can admit they have a problem with bear and cougars all they want, but the citizens of this state tied their hands. What part of the initiative process don't you understand?
Quote from: rasbo on May 19, 2014, 04:07:50 AMI watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "Never, would be your correct answer, Rasbo. WDFW won't even admit they have a bear/cougar problem. Remember Oregon and WA came out with the first wolf pack in 70 years the very same day, Oregon's wolves showed up in the middle of cattle country and look at ODFG and the USFWS's record of confirming livestock kills,, and then look at WDFW. As pitiful as ODFG confirmed wolf kills are, WDFW is far worse.
I watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball?
Eh just shoot one then call up wdfw and tell them you told me it was a coyote so I shot it
Quote from: Ccortez on May 19, 2014, 08:36:57 AMEh just shoot one then call up wdfw and tell them you told me it was a coyote so I shot it thats what i am gonna do when these yotes show up on the wetside in my backyard, pretty tough for WDFW to hammer you in a court of law when they are the ones telling you its a coyote, i do however beleive in what bixtex has said about people thinking they saw this when they really saw a house cat or a fluffy dog! but if it comes from a farmer in wolf country that has seen coyotes everyday of his life, it should be taken a little more serious, for craps sake, that a game wardens or a wdfw bio's job, earn your paycheck, if a "CUSTOMER" calls then it should be followed up on, i would lose my damn job if i didnt respond to a customer report plain and simple, it might suck but thats what they signed up for
Quote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 10:14:47 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 09:08:00 AMQuote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 09:01:16 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 06:21:01 AMQuote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 06:13:16 AMQuote from: rasbo on May 19, 2014, 04:07:50 AMI watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "Never, would be your correct answer, Rasbo. WDFW won't even admit they have a bear/cougar problem. Remember Oregon and WA came out with the first wolf pack in 70 years the very same day, Oregon's wolves showed up in the middle of cattle country and look at ODFG and the USFWS's record of confirming livestock kills,, and then look at WDFW. As pitiful as ODFG confirmed wolf kills are, WDFW is far worse.They can admit they have a problem with bear and cougars all they want, but the citizens of this state tied their hands. What part of the initiative process don't you understand?Actually that's not very true at all. The voters only tied WDFW hands on hounds and baiting. The WDFW themselves have limited boot hunting of cougars to ridiculously low quota levels in most units that need twice as many cougar taken. WDFW has full control of bear seasons and could easily harvest more bear in every unit if they desired. The high numbers of bear and cougar are definitely the product of WDFW policy. You and I both know the best way to reduce bear and cougar numbers is with hounds. Even with increased harvests hunters are at a disadvantage in this state.Again not correct. WDFW purposefully limited boot hunting of cougar because they said too many cougars were being taken. They also have limited bear seasons in areas where they wanted more bear.I stand corrected about hunter effectiveness, but then upon closer examination it looks like what you're saying is a little misleading from the perspective of harvests...From the Seattle Times article below, I believe it's from around 2008..."The number of cats killed by hunters in Washington has climbed in recent years, exceeding levels in the 1950s when the state paid a $75 bounty to encourage eradication.Before 1996, hunters killed an average of 156 cougars a year. Since the initiative, the harvest rate increased more than 40 percent, to an average of 225 animals a year.http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2004285453_cougar16m.htmlAnd then this from WDFW a year or two ago..."Last year, hunters harvested 156 cougars statewide, up from 145 in 2011 and 108 in 2010. Ware said the number of cougars harvested this season is expected to be similar to last year. "http://wdfw.wa.gov/news/dec2613a/See, now here's the problem. People read that and see that limits, at least for a while, were increased and more cats were harvested. Then they see that in recent years the harvest has been at least close to or right at what it was when hound hunting was still going on.So are you trying to say that we weren't harvesting enough cats as far back as the 1950's? Because it looks an awful lot like the state has been harvesting as many, or more, than we were back then. Or do you have some other information I'm missing?
Quote from: Ccortez on May 19, 2014, 08:36:57 AMEh just shoot one then call up wdfw and tell them you told me it was a coyote so I shot it thats what i am gonna do when these yotes show up on the wetside in my backyard, pretty tough for WDFW to hammer you in a court of law when they are the ones telling you its a coyote
Quote from: AspenBud on May 20, 2014, 06:35:53 AMQuote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 10:14:47 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 09:08:00 AMQuote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 09:01:16 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 06:21:01 AMQuote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 06:13:16 AMQuote from: rasbo on May 19, 2014, 04:07:50 AMI watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "Never, would be your correct answer, Rasbo. WDFW won't even admit they have a bear/cougar problem. Remember Oregon and WA came out with the first wolf pack in 70 years the very same day, Oregon's wolves showed up in the middle of cattle country and look at ODFG and the USFWS's record of confirming livestock kills,, and then look at WDFW. As pitiful as ODFG confirmed wolf kills are, WDFW is far worse.They can admit they have a problem with bear and cougars all they want, but the citizens of this state tied their hands. What part of the initiative process don't you understand?Actually that's not very true at all. The voters only tied WDFW hands on hounds and baiting. The WDFW themselves have limited boot hunting of cougars to ridiculously low quota levels in most units that need twice as many cougar taken. WDFW has full control of bear seasons and could easily harvest more bear in every unit if they desired. The high numbers of bear and cougar are definitely the product of WDFW policy. You and I both know the best way to reduce bear and cougar numbers is with hounds. Even with increased harvests hunters are at a disadvantage in this state.Again not correct. WDFW purposefully limited boot hunting of cougar because they said too many cougars were being taken. They also have limited bear seasons in areas where they wanted more bear.I stand corrected about hunter effectiveness, but then upon closer examination it looks like what you're saying is a little misleading from the perspective of harvests...From the Seattle Times article below, I believe it's from around 2008..."The number of cats killed by hunters in Washington has climbed in recent years, exceeding levels in the 1950s when the state paid a $75 bounty to encourage eradication.Before 1996, hunters killed an average of 156 cougars a year. Since the initiative, the harvest rate increased more than 40 percent, to an average of 225 animals a year.http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2004285453_cougar16m.htmlAnd then this from WDFW a year or two ago..."Last year, hunters harvested 156 cougars statewide, up from 145 in 2011 and 108 in 2010. Ware said the number of cougars harvested this season is expected to be similar to last year. "http://wdfw.wa.gov/news/dec2613a/See, now here's the problem. People read that and see that limits, at least for a while, were increased and more cats were harvested. Then they see that in recent years the harvest has been at least close to or right at what it was when hound hunting was still going on.So are you trying to say that we weren't harvesting enough cats as far back as the 1950's? Because it looks an awful lot like the state has been harvesting as many, or more, than we were back then. Or do you have some other information I'm missing? This attempt to hide the real numbers of cougars and lack of harvest is more or less the same reasoning and method used by wolfers to hide the impacts of wolves on elk in Idaho and Montana.
Quote from: bearpaw on May 20, 2014, 08:54:08 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 20, 2014, 06:35:53 AMQuote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 10:14:47 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 09:08:00 AMQuote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 09:01:16 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 06:21:01 AMQuote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 06:13:16 AMQuote from: rasbo on May 19, 2014, 04:07:50 AMI watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "Never, would be your correct answer, Rasbo. WDFW won't even admit they have a bear/cougar problem. Remember Oregon and WA came out with the first wolf pack in 70 years the very same day, Oregon's wolves showed up in the middle of cattle country and look at ODFG and the USFWS's record of confirming livestock kills,, and then look at WDFW. As pitiful as ODFG confirmed wolf kills are, WDFW is far worse.They can admit they have a problem with bear and cougars all they want, but the citizens of this state tied their hands. What part of the initiative process don't you understand?Actually that's not very true at all. The voters only tied WDFW hands on hounds and baiting. The WDFW themselves have limited boot hunting of cougars to ridiculously low quota levels in most units that need twice as many cougar taken. WDFW has full control of bear seasons and could easily harvest more bear in every unit if they desired. The high numbers of bear and cougar are definitely the product of WDFW policy. You and I both know the best way to reduce bear and cougar numbers is with hounds. Even with increased harvests hunters are at a disadvantage in this state.Again not correct. WDFW purposefully limited boot hunting of cougar because they said too many cougars were being taken. They also have limited bear seasons in areas where they wanted more bear.I stand corrected about hunter effectiveness, but then upon closer examination it looks like what you're saying is a little misleading from the perspective of harvests...From the Seattle Times article below, I believe it's from around 2008..."The number of cats killed by hunters in Washington has climbed in recent years, exceeding levels in the 1950s when the state paid a $75 bounty to encourage eradication.Before 1996, hunters killed an average of 156 cougars a year. Since the initiative, the harvest rate increased more than 40 percent, to an average of 225 animals a year.http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2004285453_cougar16m.htmlAnd then this from WDFW a year or two ago..."Last year, hunters harvested 156 cougars statewide, up from 145 in 2011 and 108 in 2010. Ware said the number of cougars harvested this season is expected to be similar to last year. "http://wdfw.wa.gov/news/dec2613a/See, now here's the problem. People read that and see that limits, at least for a while, were increased and more cats were harvested. Then they see that in recent years the harvest has been at least close to or right at what it was when hound hunting was still going on.So are you trying to say that we weren't harvesting enough cats as far back as the 1950's? Because it looks an awful lot like the state has been harvesting as many, or more, than we were back then. Or do you have some other information I'm missing? This attempt to hide the real numbers of cougars and lack of harvest is more or less the same reasoning and method used by wolfers to hide the impacts of wolves on elk in Idaho and Montana.Are you saying the state agencies are hiding the impacts of predators on ungulates ? Or just some Seattle Times reporters?Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
Quote from: jackmaster on May 20, 2014, 06:58:21 AMQuote from: Ccortez on May 19, 2014, 08:36:57 AMEh just shoot one then call up wdfw and tell them you told me it was a coyote so I shot it thats what i am gonna do when these yotes show up on the wetside in my backyard, pretty tough for WDFW to hammer you in a court of law when they are the ones telling you its a coyoteI'm not sure I would go with that logic. I think it would be pretty easy for WDFW to railroad somebody who shot a wolf . Not sure I would want a jury trial in western Washington either!!Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
Quote from: AspenBud on May 20, 2014, 06:35:53 AMQuote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 10:14:47 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 09:08:00 AMQuote from: bearpaw on May 19, 2014, 09:01:16 AMQuote from: AspenBud on May 19, 2014, 06:21:01 AMQuote from: wolfbait on May 19, 2014, 06:13:16 AMQuote from: rasbo on May 19, 2014, 04:07:50 AMI watched a program last night about the wallowa area in NE oregon,elk populations are dropping and the conclusion they seem to be arriving at is cougar and bears are killing calves at an alarming rate...Now toss in the wolves in that area which of course dont cause many problems ..and the were not mentioned I might add...cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "cullling bears and cougars seem to be where oregon might go with their problem,why and when will wa state get on the ball? "Never, would be your correct answer, Rasbo. WDFW won't even admit they have a bear/cougar problem. Remember Oregon and WA came out with the first wolf pack in 70 years the very same day, Oregon's wolves showed up in the middle of cattle country and look at ODFG and the USFWS's record of confirming livestock kills,, and then look at WDFW. As pitiful as ODFG confirmed wolf kills are, WDFW is far worse.They can admit they have a problem with bear and cougars all they want, but the citizens of this state tied their hands. What part of the initiative process don't you understand?Actually that's not very true at all. The voters only tied WDFW hands on hounds and baiting. The WDFW themselves have limited boot hunting of cougars to ridiculously low quota levels in most units that need twice as many cougar taken. WDFW has full control of bear seasons and could easily harvest more bear in every unit if they desired. The high numbers of bear and cougar are definitely the product of WDFW policy. You and I both know the best way to reduce bear and cougar numbers is with hounds. Even with increased harvests hunters are at a disadvantage in this state.Again not correct. WDFW purposefully limited boot hunting of cougar because they said too many cougars were being taken. They also have limited bear seasons in areas where they wanted more bear.I stand corrected about hunter effectiveness, but then upon closer examination it looks like what you're saying is a little misleading from the perspective of harvests...From the Seattle Times article below, I believe it's from around 2008..."The number of cats killed by hunters in Washington has climbed in recent years, exceeding levels in the 1950s when the state paid a $75 bounty to encourage eradication.Before 1996, hunters killed an average of 156 cougars a year. Since the initiative, the harvest rate increased more than 40 percent, to an average of 225 animals a year.http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2004285453_cougar16m.htmlAnd then this from WDFW a year or two ago..."Last year, hunters harvested 156 cougars statewide, up from 145 in 2011 and 108 in 2010. Ware said the number of cougars harvested this season is expected to be similar to last year. "http://wdfw.wa.gov/news/dec2613a/See, now here's the problem. People read that and see that limits, at least for a while, were increased and more cats were harvested. Then they see that in recent years the harvest has been at least close to or right at what it was when hound hunting was still going on.So are you trying to say that we weren't harvesting enough cats as far back as the 1950's? Because it looks an awful lot like the state has been harvesting as many, or more, than we were back then. Or do you have some other information I'm missing? You are wrong again. Maybe you need to give up on getting your wildlife data from the Seattle Times. Since 2008 WDFW has dropped the quotas in traditional cougar producing units to very low levels, lower than ever before. Compare the current harvest data for all the traditional high cougar producing units to previous data. The only reason harvest data gathered on a statewide basis is near previous harvest levels is because WDFW has allowed cougar to populate into many more areas of the state. Many cougar are being taken in units that previously held few, if any cougars. A good percentage of the cougar harvest is coming from areas that were not previously producing much if any cougar harvest, which means far fewer cougar are being taken in the traditional high cougar producing areas. This attempt to hide the real numbers of cougars and lack of harvest is more or less the same reasoning and method used by wolfers to hide the impacts of wolves on elk in Idaho and Montana.