Free: Contests & Raffles.
That sort of poaching ought to be worth several years in prison. No excuse.
Quote from: bobcat on April 18, 2017, 01:39:38 PMThat sort of poaching ought to be worth several years in prison. No excuse.
Sounds like he got tired of the elk eating his farm and shot them: http://www.wallowa.com/local_news/20170413/arrest-made-in-elk-taking-case-in-wallowa
Mike Hansen, assistant district wildlife biologist for ODFW, said that the department can issue a kill permit or a hazing permit for elk that cause consistent damage to a farmer’s crops. Hansen said Harshfield had contacted ODFW about the permits. The kill permit requires the farmer to field dress and skin the animal and take it to a meat processing facility.“He did not want to do that,” Hansen said. “We gave him a haze permit.”
I wonder how many hunters he allowed onto his property last Fall? I'm betting none.
Reminds me of what a cherry grower in the Naches Heights area about 20 years ago. Elk would get into his orchard and top his little trees. He tried to get WDFW to help and they wouldn't or didn't so he took matters into his own hands.
Quote from: Badhabit on April 18, 2017, 05:39:58 PMReminds me of what a cherry grower in the Naches Heights area about 20 years ago. Elk would get into his orchard and top his little trees. He tried to get WDFW to help and they wouldn't or didn't so he took matters into his own hands.Sounds to me like the ODFW was responding by offering him harvest tags and then a hazing permit. In addition, had he offered up his property to some hunters, he might have had a positive result. Anyone who dumps 25 elk and leaves them to rot is a dirtbag. He had tools and he chose not to use them.