Free: Contests & Raffles.
Growing up in Colfax and belonging to a farming family, I would have to strongly disagree with lack of habitat, 10 dollar wheat, etc as exuses for lack of birds in Whitman. In 1994, there was very little CRP in Whitman county - the amount of CRP cover that we have today is 10 fold what we had 10 or 11 years ago. We had 10 dollar wheat for one year - have you looked at recent wheat prices? I can also tell you that very little CRP came out to plant crop! Farmers could barely afford to plant the fall crop this year with inflated diesel and fertilizer costs. The harsh winter and wet spring are the reasons you are not seeing birds. Three years ago was the best pheasant year we ever had. You would see 500 birds a day easy on our place. This year you will be lucky to see 40. This is not from overhunting or lack of habitat - we allow very limited hunting and the habitat was outstanding this year with the wet spring. My
You dont know much about sustaining a good Elk heard do you bobcat.........dont feed them = dont hunt them.
For nesting and reproduction, some years are good, some years are bad. This year, not so good.For habitat, in dryland areas, things are worse than the 60's-early 70's, when all the fencerows were in. Things are better than the late 80's-90's, when everybody plowed and farmed everything.In irrigated ground, frankly, given the chemigation programs and the practices of industrial agriculture, it's amazing anything is alive.Wild bird production went gunnybag the year the idiout legislator from Gig Harbor decided that pheasant release as practiced on the west side should be done statewide. After that, all the funding left the wild bird program, and now they release prison raised birds. In western WA, so be it. In eastern WA, it feeds the coyotes and the hawks.We could have both, but we won't because there isn't enough money for both and the majority of W.Washington hunters want release programs in Eastern Wa. Look at where they are. Yes, they are exactly like planted trout programs, and it is easy to measure performance: raised x birds, deployed x birds, observed y hunters, = x/y birds per hunter. Success.Promote habitat, access and wild birds through chick raising programs in 4H and other civic clubs along with limited feeding programs, promote ethical hunting and tourism, and all of a sudden it works, the populations become able to naturally survive down condition years, but success is difficult to measure precisely. See turkeys. Promote hucking chickens out of the back of the truck so prisoners have something to do, and you have what we have.Promote wild fish and the values that create them, and you have a sustainable fishery. Promote hatcheries, you have what we have. Can't wait until they try to fix the "mule deer problem".I think to fix this minds need to change in the public, the legislature, and the department.