Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: DIYARCHERYJUNKIE on June 23, 2014, 10:41:39 PMWhy do would one need permission to test elk? Why can't they get Roosevelt elk and test them independently from wdfw? I would think environmentalist, wildlife advocates and independent research labs would be all over this.they can do whatever research they want. all they need is a scientific collecting permit...not hard to get because elk are not Esa protected...I guess it's easier to just throw stones at others than to do your own work??Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
Why do would one need permission to test elk? Why can't they get Roosevelt elk and test them independently from wdfw? I would think environmentalist, wildlife advocates and independent research labs would be all over this.
They don't know what's causing this. Therefore, they can't know that the meat is safe. I find it interesting that nothing but treponemes has been mentioned in this release - nothing - even though they don't know what's causing this. They're trying to lead the reader in a specific direction even as they say they're ignorant of the cause. If you guys are fine with what they've told you about the animals, especially those of you who hunt this area, there's nothing more to be said. Personally, I don't believe we're being given all the facts and I don't believe the WDFW wants to discover all of the facts. There's a lot more here at play then simple wildlife management. I'm sure that Idahohntr has full faith and confidence in the WDFW and their "science". As a matter of fact, there seems to be nothing the WDFW does with which he doesn't agree, which is interesting to note. He can eat all the hoof diseased elk he wants to. You won't catch me out there or eating the meat from those animals.
Shouldn't the Master Hunters want to decline the honor, since they are supposedly the most ethical and moral of the hunting population? Wouldn't wholesale eradication of so many elk be beyond what they find acceptable.
So at what point do we find ourselves being the hypocrite. We make the argument that putting them down is the right course of action. We agree we would put down a suffering dog... But do we allow a highly contagious dog to wait 20 years before taking action? Apparently we do. If putting down sick animals is morally/ethically just, then we have sat on our thumbs for 20 years. As citizens of Washington State our flaw is that we expect the WDFW to do all the dirty work and then let us reap the benefits, while they take any blame for things gone awry. I'm not calling a certain group all I'm calling us all out. I'm not for vigalante justice or anarchy. I'm for progress in the right direction. I hate to say it, but I'm agreeing with Idaho Huntr on the hoof rot issue. We are letting the WDFW be our mouthpiece, our wildlife investment bankers, and then crucifying them at every step. Since we the sheeple don't want to take action ourselves we are stuck with the WDFW doing the work. So why are we working against them? If we willingly let them manage "our" wildlife, why are we against what they do?Whose fault is it really that trapping and hound hunting became banned? WDFW's? No, it is your fault and my fault.
We don't get to make the decision when to start culling wildlife. There are hunters/citizens, a few posting on this thread, who've been involved in this and prodding the WDFW for years to take action. Game management is the responsibility of the WDFW or any F&G department. They're the ones with the tools to make science-based decisions to cull or not to cull, not the citizens of the state. I reject your assertion that it's the hunters in this state that have been sitting on their hands and doing nothing. That responsibility lies with the state.