Free: Contests & Raffles.
im actually not a hound hunter (nothing against it) and DB your last response is just silly and I think you may already know that. it is currently illegal to use drones in aid of hunting or to hunt on the same day as flying over an area. as it should be. these cameras will become paramount to the same type of surveillance. Montana has it right. use them all you want out of season. I hope Idaho follows suit.
Drones have the ability to cover miles of ground, cell cameras are stuck in one spot covering a very small space. I don't put them in the same category at all.
Quote from: lord grizzly on June 07, 2017, 10:52:24 AMim actually not a hound hunter (nothing against it) and DB your last response is just silly and I think you may already know that. it is currently illegal to use drones in aid of hunting or to hunt on the same day as flying over an area. as it should be. these cameras will become paramount to the same type of surveillance. Montana has it right. use them all you want out of season. I hope Idaho follows suit.It's not silly...it's valid. - People do hunt pigs from helicopters so it is legal in some places.- The problem with using airborne technology is the unsustainable/excessive stress it can put on the animals.- Another issues with the use of airborne technology is that it can significantly impact the experience of others (particularly on public lands)
Quote from: Southpole on June 07, 2017, 11:00:25 AMDrones have the ability to cover miles of ground, cell cameras are stuck in one spot covering a very small space. I don't put them in the same category at all. until a commercial operation puts one up every 1/4 mile because they cant use drones to cover those miles.
If the sole standard for determining if something should be regulated is whether or not it increases harvest, then the list of things to be regulated is nearly endless. I suspect that advancements in firearms, optics, and mapping technologies as examples have done more to increase harvest over the last 50 years that drones ever would, and yet most hunters support regulation of drones.
I think you need to separate your view of success rate and fair chase. they are two entirely different things.
Quote from: lord grizzly on June 07, 2017, 11:03:18 AMQuote from: Southpole on June 07, 2017, 11:00:25 AMDrones have the ability to cover miles of ground, cell cameras are stuck in one spot covering a very small space. I don't put them in the same category at all. until a commercial operation puts one up every 1/4 mile because they cant use drones to cover those miles. That sounds practical and inexpensive
Quote from: Southpole on June 07, 2017, 11:16:05 AMQuote from: lord grizzly on June 07, 2017, 11:03:18 AMQuote from: Southpole on June 07, 2017, 11:00:25 AMDrones have the ability to cover miles of ground, cell cameras are stuck in one spot covering a very small space. I don't put them in the same category at all. until a commercial operation puts one up every 1/4 mile because they cant use drones to cover those miles. That sounds practical and inexpensive right now yes. unpractical, only thing stopping it is access to better and readily affordable tech. that's been my point in this whole discussion (most people must not read entire sentences) why do any of you think this tech is not advancing every day? and why is it such a terrible thing to see game departments trying to keep up with it? as much as you all bitch about F7G not doing anything you bitch more when they do. amazing