Free: Contests & Raffles.
less tags sold..off season hound hunts for cougar.Permits to bait bears with strict details on bait and clean sites..
Quote from: rasbo on July 25, 2014, 03:53:57 AMless tags sold..off season hound hunts for cougar.Permits to bait bears with strict details on bait and clean sites..Darn good starts!I think a two tag system like Idaho's would be good. The whitetail/blacktail tag would get you long seasons with little restrictions. The mule deer tag would get you very short seasons in few areas and draw chances for most of the rest. Predators may be the number one problem, but hunter harvest is easier to manage.
Quote from: Todd_ID on July 25, 2014, 06:00:43 AMQuote from: rasbo on July 25, 2014, 03:53:57 AMless tags sold..off season hound hunts for cougar.Permits to bait bears with strict details on bait and clean sites..Darn good starts!I think a two tag system like Idaho's would be good. The whitetail/blacktail tag would get you long seasons with little restrictions. The mule deer tag would get you very short seasons in few areas and draw chances for most of the rest. Predators may be the number one problem, but hunter harvest is easier to manage.I really like your Idaho style, two tag idea. sent from my typewriter
Quote from: rasbo on July 25, 2014, 03:53:57 AMless tags sold..off season hound hunts for cougar.Permits to bait bears with strict details on bait and clean sites..Predators may be the number one problem, but hunter harvest is easier to manage.
Quote from: grundy53 on July 25, 2014, 06:06:17 AMQuote from: Todd_ID on July 25, 2014, 06:00:43 AMQuote from: rasbo on July 25, 2014, 03:53:57 AMless tags sold..off season hound hunts for cougar.Permits to bait bears with strict details on bait and clean sites..Darn good starts!I think a two tag system like Idaho's would be good. The whitetail/blacktail tag would get you long seasons with little restrictions. The mule deer tag would get you very short seasons in few areas and draw chances for most of the rest. Predators may be the number one problem, but hunter harvest is easier to manage.I really like your Idaho style, two tag idea. sent from my typewriterThat's all well and good except for the massive concentration of new whitetail/blacktail hunters when they don't get a mule deer tag. Maybe I'm missing something.
Probably get a lot of disagreement, BUT I think the habitat/predator effect on mule deer is way overblown. Frankly, in the late 50's early sixties with the exception of wolves there were considerably more predators (Mt. Lions, coyotes and bears) than there are now. In the more remote summer habitat lions and bears were quite common (at least in Utah, a major mule deer state and pretty good study of long term mule deer management) Herds were doing very well. In the mid 60's when herds began to decline the state put an emphasis on habitat restoration and cleared thousands of acres of winter habitat of non browse vegetation (junipers and other evergreens) in an effort to create better winter browse. Results: negligible. Bottom Line-the major reason for mule deer decline is humans. Not just hunters, but the overall impact of a much bigger population intruding upon mule deer habitat. Homes built on prime winter ground. Better highways leading to higher road kill numbers. Year around off road recreation not only during the harsh winter period, but during the early fawning season. Hunting seasons that extend from late August into (and sometimes thru) December. (not just deer hunting, but, as an example, a late fall/winter turkey hunt that chases deer from prime wintering ground at times) Big game management always seems to be reactive instead of proactive. Case after case can be cited where late hunts, antlerless hunts take place one year and the next year theres either a total closure or prohibitive permit system put in place. We always seem to wait until the horses are out before we close the barn doors. We watch herds decline with hunters reporting seeing less and less deer, but it's ok-the buck/doe ratio is good. How do manage against this? You can't stop people from building or recreating. You can't stop highways from being built and keep more cars off the road. You can't blame it all on hunting. Guess I'm glad in a way to be old, I don't have many answers for these new problems.
Quote from: baldopepper on July 25, 2014, 08:51:04 AMProbably get a lot of disagreement, BUT I think the habitat/predator effect on mule deer is way overblown. Frankly, in the late 50's early sixties with the exception of wolves there were considerably more predators (Mt. Lions, coyotes and bears) than there are now. In the more remote summer habitat lions and bears were quite common (at least in Utah, a major mule deer state and pretty good study of long term mule deer management) Herds were doing very well. In the mid 60's when herds began to decline the state put an emphasis on habitat restoration and cleared thousands of acres of winter habitat of non browse vegetation (junipers and other evergreens) in an effort to create better winter browse. Results: negligible. Bottom Line-the major reason for mule deer decline is humans. Not just hunters, but the overall impact of a much bigger population intruding upon mule deer habitat. Homes built on prime winter ground. Better highways leading to higher road kill numbers. Year around off road recreation not only during the harsh winter period, but during the early fawning season. Hunting seasons that extend from late August into (and sometimes thru) December. (not just deer hunting, but, as an example, a late fall/winter turkey hunt that chases deer from prime wintering ground at times) Big game management always seems to be reactive instead of proactive. Case after case can be cited where late hunts, antlerless hunts take place one year and the next year theres either a total closure or prohibitive permit system put in place. We always seem to wait until the horses are out before we close the barn doors. We watch herds decline with hunters reporting seeing less and less deer, but it's ok-the buck/doe ratio is good. How do manage against this? You can't stop people from building or recreating. You can't stop highways from being built and keep more cars off the road. You can't blame it all on hunting. Guess I'm glad in a way to be old, I don't have many answers for these new problems. I am not sure I buy there are less predators than the 50's ...I think we have more predators now than back then ..Especially now that we do not have a general hound hunting season ..I do not care what the Bio's think or know ..I am very sure there are predators that never see man and have no way of being counted by Bio's who anyone else that thinks they know so ....
Quote from: Todd_ID on July 25, 2014, 06:00:43 AMQuote from: rasbo on July 25, 2014, 03:53:57 AMless tags sold..off season hound hunts for cougar.Permits to bait bears with strict details on bait and clean sites..Predators may be the number one problem, but hunter harvest is easier to manage.Soo lets mess with everyone and make them change rather than address the underlying predator and habitat issues. Also add extra complexity for Hunter and more load on wdfw staff to administer. Sounds like a great idea, take my guns too since crazy people use them to kill people...Sorry don't mean to attack you personally, You are far from the only person to have this idea.But the "have to do something" because it is easier solutions bother me as they don't solve problems, just mask them to everyone's long term detriment. I deal with it at work too, one dept does double work because another dept manager not want to hold his workers accountable.