Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: bigtex on June 07, 2014, 09:16:09 AMThe law does not separate between species. It's simply "wasting wildlife," per state law "wildlife" means those in the animal kingdom, coyotes are in the animal kingdom. You can't waste a coyote because it's a predator, it falls under the animal kingdom and per state law, you can't waste wildlife.Yes that's the law. So why is no one required to eat the meat of a coyote? If you leave a quarter of a deer or elk in the field, you would be cited for wastage. Can you cite a single case where a Washington hunter was cited for leaving the meat of a coyote in the field?
The law does not separate between species. It's simply "wasting wildlife," per state law "wildlife" means those in the animal kingdom, coyotes are in the animal kingdom. You can't waste a coyote because it's a predator, it falls under the animal kingdom and per state law, you can't waste wildlife.
Quote from: Bob33 on June 07, 2014, 09:27:45 AMQuote from: bigtex on June 07, 2014, 09:16:09 AMThe law does not separate between species. It's simply "wasting wildlife," per state law "wildlife" means those in the animal kingdom, coyotes are in the animal kingdom. You can't waste a coyote because it's a predator, it falls under the animal kingdom and per state law, you can't waste wildlife.Yes that's the law. So why is no one required to eat the meat of a coyote? If you leave a quarter of a deer or elk in the field, you would be cited for wastage. Can you cite a single case where a Washington hunter was cited for leaving the meat of a coyote in the field?As I've said officers write for it in Grant and Adams Counties which are some of the most popular counties in the state for coyote hunting. If it is the law then you can cite for it, doesn't mean all officers will, it just means they can. And like I've said, I've konwn officers that have, and I would have no problem with an officer doing it.
What would constitute NOT wasting a coyote, BT? Keeping the pelt? What if the pelt were mangy? I would think that someone fighting a wasting charge in court for a coyote they let lay in the field wouldn't be too hard-pressed to win it. I can't imagine a court in the country that would consider not eating one a waste of game, so the pelt would be the only issue. I'm referring only to coyotes legally killed with landowner permission or on public land. Thanks for your input, BT.
What would be accomplished by citing someone for leaving a coyote in the field? It makes no sense to me.
Just don't shoot anything on someone's property you do not have permission to do so on, and all the questions and problems disappear.
What fun would that be? Then all we would have to talk about is this year's special permit drawing...and we all know how boring that is!