Free: Contests & Raffles.
I'm just curious how many of these people that are complaining have applied and have been drawn and filled cow tags? I know I'll be taking my son in November to fill his doe tags.
I'm just curious how many of these people that are complaining have applied and have been drawn and filled cow tags?
They really issued 1000 doe tags? Where did you see the exact number? Pretty shameful by wdfg if that's the case and the success rates are high the deer herd will be in major decline for years and doubtful it will ever recover. They might as well just close the areas affected down for no hunting! If they want to reduce some deer should have been done for youths, disabled hunters, and very limited tags. Or just feed the deer this year.
I'd bet at least 30 per cent of hunters are unable to distinguish a mule doe from a wt doe in the field when a shot opportunity arises
What people don't think about is a lot of people in positions to make the rules don't really want us hunters out hunting anyways. Thry just want the woods to be a place for people to visit I guess or leave alone all together. Hence reintroduction of wolves and the over abundance of antlerless tags, also shortened seasons. Make the hunting suck and not so many hunters anymore. Also the price of tags and the new permit program, it says right on the website it was designed to increase profits which they call revenue. They almost treat the environment like a science experiment even though guys who have hunted there for 30 years and notice a giant decline in deer numbers and hunt quality say otherwise. It's like the wolves helping the Beavers and the trout, Ya right....Just my 2cents...
Quote from: pianoman9701 on October 11, 2014, 08:24:03 AMMaybe I don't understand, but I thought they were issuing the tags because the fires burned up the habitat and they're needing to reduce the herd so they don't starve to death. Is that not true?yes, true...but the way I read it the concerns are specific. Mule deer in that area have been declining. Whitetails have been moving in and competing with them. The guys opposed to this are opposed to further decline in muleys. But fine with removing the whitetails. Then the overall herd size might match the food left after the fires and muleys will at least be stable or possibly rebound. Sounds like mules might take a hit in the doe department...where they don't need it (so whether intentional or not--further decline the muleys). Then there is the issue of what people normally look for out there--"the big fat healthy doe" and not the smaller does. The big does might be more likely to survive a hard winter (in whitetail land generally the bigger older deer survive better in the upper Midwest winters). So the does left over might be the smaller ones that killed in the winter anyways. I guess worse case scenario, all the does that get shot are big healthy mule deer that would likely make it through a bad winter; and then a bad winter strikes and kills off the less prepared mule deer does and the following season you have a greater explosion of whiteys and more decline of muleys.
Maybe I don't understand, but I thought they were issuing the tags because the fires burned up the habitat and they're needing to reduce the herd so they don't starve to death. Is that not true?
Quote from: steen on October 11, 2014, 12:10:54 PMI'm thinking there are more whitetail tags than muledeer tags. Maybe the kids have the muledeer tags, mine is a whitetail. I don't have a problem shooting a whitetail doe!The email I got from wdfw did not specify one specific species of deer as far as the tag. It just says second deer tag to harvest a doe.
I'm thinking there are more whitetail tags than muledeer tags. Maybe the kids have the muledeer tags, mine is a whitetail. I don't have a problem shooting a whitetail doe!