Free: Contests & Raffles.
Ok, it's break time. There are a lot of tribal members that strictly hunt the rez and a big portion of my family does. If you look at a map of our ceded lands that will give you an idea of the territory at which we lived, hunted, fished and gathered other traditional foods/medicines. I say idea because our U & A territories extend beyond that.So, within my family we gathered, fished and hunted over large areas and I'm continuing that with my children. There are areas that I had not hunted or gathered and I'm always looking for new areas for many reasons. The food in one area may reach ripeness sooner or later then one area, food may be ready to gather at different times so I follow the food. Hunting, I spread myself over areas I was shown by family and then explore and learn new areas all the time as I don't want to have a large or adverse impact on game in that area.The mentality I have is its all within our boundaries and It's traditional/ancestral grounds then I will go there. If we do not exercise our rights within our traditional/ancestral lands what's to stop the State or Gov't from taking it away or saying you didn't go there anymore or utilize it anymore therefore you lose any rights to it, such as imminent domain.
I answered that jackelope, yes there's deer and elk there and yes tribal members hunt there. I don't know numbers or stats for over 10,000 members when it comes to who does or doesn't hunt on or off the rez. I met an in-law for the 1st time while hunting a new area a couple years ago. I would say half my family is rez hunting only the other half are both, on and off.
Quote from: fishngamereaper on November 30, 2016, 12:26:38 PMAgain serious question. The rez is roughly 1.2 million acres in size. Is there no game to be had, is the quality poor, has it been over hunted. Why is there the need to hunt off the rez in quality areas. If its just sustenance hunting why go to the permit only areas. Or is it truly about trophy hunting and not about putting food on the table. Is it an attitude that I can do it so I will do it and no me can stop me. I'm not proposing to take away rights, I'm just trying to find the common sense approach to hunting area's that, in general are once in a lifetime hunts for the general white man.It is one of our rights, we can hunt off the Reservation, Im not condoning go kill everythingn or trophies
Again serious question. The rez is roughly 1.2 million acres in size. Is there no game to be had, is the quality poor, has it been over hunted. Why is there the need to hunt off the rez in quality areas. If its just sustenance hunting why go to the permit only areas. Or is it truly about trophy hunting and not about putting food on the table. Is it an attitude that I can do it so I will do it and no me can stop me. I'm not proposing to take away rights, I'm just trying to find the common sense approach to hunting area's that, in general are once in a lifetime hunts for the general white man.
The mentality I have is its all within our boundaries and It's traditional/ancestral grounds then I will go there. If we do not exercise our rights within our traditional/ancestral lands what's to stop the State or Gov't from taking it away or saying you didn't go there anymore or utilize it anymore therefore you lose any rights to it, such as imminent domain.
I kind of hate to weigh in here, but throughout my career, I've been faced with "problems" continuously that needed to be fixed. The one thing I learned early on, and it has made me an effective problem solver, is to understand the goal of any solution. To do that, one needs to understand what the PROBLEM is. Everyone states that problems need fixing, the treaties, the natives policing their own, the importance of wildlife vs. shellfish with the WDFW, penalties are not strong enough, the wolves, cougars, bobcats, coyotes, liberals wanting to shut down our public lands, on and on and on. These problems will never be "fixed" unless everyone understands what impact these problems are creating today. In other words, in the big picture, what is the problem???So, start with the set of undesirable conditions that these "problems" are causing. What is the big problem? The answer is not "Natives hunt and kill a lot of animals". If you want to look at it from the other direction, "What does something look like AFTER a solution is implemented?" And the answer there is not "Natives must follow all the rules like everyone else". The answer is "What are you really pissed about?" My guess is that it's not easy enough for you (and every other hunter) to go out and kill a tasty trophy every time you want to. There are MANY reasons for this, so get to work formulating the reasons. Predators might be one. The Natives enforcement policies might be another. WDFW management strategies might be another. Poachers might be another. Develop a list of problems that are causing this "undesirable situation" that is making everyone complain. This is the beginning of the development of a STRATEGY. Impact analysis tells you what "problems" have the biggest impact on your desired outcome. Please remember that in the big picture, what something looks like AFTER the solutions are implemented to remedy the "problems" everyone has identified, it will NOT BE POSSIBLE for everyone to go out and kill a tasty trophy whenever they want. So, BE REASONABLE and REALISTIC in what you would like to see AFTER the solutions to the problems you identified are implemented. Now, from experience, and I've been doign this for over 30 years, people are way too small minded to understand a "big picture" or "top down" approach. Most are much more comfortable finding on and clinging to an emotional argument, one that they can yell and complain about, because face it, the big picture approach is HARD and takes a LOT OF WORK. However, by making all Natives follow the same rules as the general public, YOUR FUTURE VISION of hunting in WA will NOT HAPPEN! Why? Because there are poachers, and there are predators, and there are hard winters that kill a lot of game, and there are BS policies that the WDFW implements, and of course, there isn't enough MONEY to fix all the problems you identify. So, to those who, like bradley, claim a paradigm shift is needed to solve the "problem" of the treaties, I say you need a bigger paradigm shift and start not with a problem, but with a vision of what you would like to see in the future. THEN go out and find what is preventing that vision, and THEN understand the IMPACT of each thing that is preventing that vision, prioritize, and start knocking those things off. Be prepared for a long, hard implementation of the solutions, be prepared to PAY to realize your vision, and go out and get it done instead of pointing out random things that "need to be fixed".Now, small minded people that lack the mental capacity to understand what I just said, hold forth with your wisdom of what the real problem is. Dave
I was hoping that something other than a bunch of hostility came out of the thread that the OP started with the intent of creating chaos. That "something" might be as little as a "better understanding" of what is causing such unhappiness among posters. Sorry if I ruined the thread for you Plat.