Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: singleshot12 on March 21, 2016, 02:18:01 PMMaybe not such a bad thing? Hunting should stay as it has always been for thousands of years. Back to the basics of actual hunting with stick and string. Getting hunting back closer to the way it was may be a good for the natural scheme of things. Or further back then that when you would light the forest on fire and chase herds off cliffs. Spears and atlatls are where it's at.
Maybe not such a bad thing? Hunting should stay as it has always been for thousands of years. Back to the basics of actual hunting with stick and string. Getting hunting back closer to the way it was may be a good for the natural scheme of things.
Whoever said in the other thread that only 5 people wanted things changed that testified at the commission meeting either weren't paying attention or have a great set of rose colored glasses. About 35-40% wanted no change and about 35% wanted limits on the amount of bait, (or were ok with it), and the rest wanted to ban baiting all together.
The only way that you are going to stop these outfitters is close the GMU down that they are hunting and keep closing GMU's as they move to one that is open, which is exactly what the anti hunters want. If you limit baiting to 10 gallons, they are going to divide up those cheap truckloads of apples and put 10 gallons every 200 yards or feet or whatever the distance is that they said you had to be away from one bait site to another. You can still have a truckload of apples spread out over 2 or 3 acres, you don't think that is still going to draw deer?Limit it even further and they will just put in a food plot, sure it is more money and more work but they will just charge more for the hunt.You don't impose a statewide rule to try to get a few individuals to act the way you want them to. They are going to find a way to get around the rules.
Quote from: Rainier10 on March 21, 2016, 02:38:07 PMThe only way that you are going to stop these outfitters is close the GMU down that they are hunting and keep closing GMU's as they move to one that is open, which is exactly what the anti hunters want. If you limit baiting to 10 gallons, they are going to divide up those cheap truckloads of apples and put 10 gallons every 200 yards or feet or whatever the distance is that they said you had to be away from one bait site to another. You can still have a truckload of apples spread out over 2 or 3 acres, you don't think that is still going to draw deer?Limit it even further and they will just put in a food plot, sure it is more money and more work but they will just charge more for the hunt.You don't impose a statewide rule to try to get a few individuals to act the way you want them to. They are going to find a way to get around the rules.I may be way off but seems to me the easiest solution to this would just outlaw baiting for commercial hunts/outfitter hunts? I have been on several guided hunts and none involved bait. I would never dream of paying money to go hunt over a bait pile, but would have no problem hunting over bait I put out.
Well to be fair they called hunters and got a lot saying to ban it, more than 50% for deer and higher for Elk.
Quote from: KFhunter on March 21, 2016, 11:43:27 AMWell to be fair they called hunters and got a lot saying to ban it, more than 50% for deer and higher for Elk.I never got a call....
Why don't we just make hunting illegal in one go instead of doing it slowly?