Free: Contests & Raffles.
As I already stated, I'm not eating a rat.Huntnphool, is there anything I can do to "spoke" the critter so that it will give me a better look? I don't want to shoot a beaver and get all tangled up with the game department. I watched it for several minutes yesterday evening and never did get a good look at it's tail. The body of water it was in is real close to the irrigation canal but the only "trees" within miles of that place are one scraggly hawthorn and one piece of crap cottonwood. I'll be out to look them over for damage but I don't know where a beaver would have come from in these parts.
Shoot and leave? Coyote Bait? What should I do with it (I'm not eating a rat)?
Quote from: HawkCreek on May 31, 2014, 08:56:30 AMShoot and leave? Coyote Bait? What should I do with it (I'm not eating a rat)?You say you don't want to shoot a beaver and then get in trouble with WDFW, yet you ask if you should just "shoot and leave" it? Shooting and leaving ANYTHING will end up with wastage of wildlife charges.
Quote from: bigtex on May 31, 2014, 11:28:31 AMQuote from: HawkCreek on May 31, 2014, 08:56:30 AMShoot and leave? Coyote Bait? What should I do with it (I'm not eating a rat)?You say you don't want to shoot a beaver and then get in trouble with WDFW, yet you ask if you should just "shoot and leave" it? Shooting and leaving ANYTHING will end up with wastage of wildlife charges.I said I don't want to shoot a beaver. Meaning I will have positive ID before I kill something since the state views a native animal like beaver differently than an invasive animal like the nutria.A nutria is a pest and I would leave. Kinda like coyotes, they are a pest and harass/harm livestock, they are shot on sight but nobody around here has a use for them. Washington State says nutria are no bueno, so ya I'll kill it and leave it.
Quote from: HawkCreek on May 31, 2014, 11:35:28 AMQuote from: bigtex on May 31, 2014, 11:28:31 AMQuote from: HawkCreek on May 31, 2014, 08:56:30 AMShoot and leave? Coyote Bait? What should I do with it (I'm not eating a rat)?You say you don't want to shoot a beaver and then get in trouble with WDFW, yet you ask if you should just "shoot and leave" it? Shooting and leaving ANYTHING will end up with wastage of wildlife charges.I said I don't want to shoot a beaver. Meaning I will have positive ID before I kill something since the state views a native animal like beaver differently than an invasive animal like the nutria.A nutria is a pest and I would leave. Kinda like coyotes, they are a pest and harass/harm livestock, they are shot on sight but nobody around here has a use for them. Washington State says nutria are no bueno, so ya I'll kill it and leave it.I know what you said. You missed my point.Killing it and leaving it will end up with charges from WDFW. It is against the law to shoot and leave anything, doesn't matter if it's a deer or a coyote. Nothing like admitting to a wildlife law violation on a hunting website.