Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Wacenturion on March 07, 2009, 07:41:51 AMThe key statement...."There is a very good reason why the winter kill around St. Helen's is so great, it's because the habitat can not handle the herd size."Absolutely true......but what is a shame is that WDFW would rather meet and discuss problems like this than actually do something on the ground to improve it. It's like your yard isn't going to mow itself.....you have to get off your butt and do it it. Oh...and don't tell me all those thousands of dollars worth of seed aerial dropped on the old river bed of rocks and some sand years ago was doing what I would call habitat improvement. What a joke. The problem exists because WDFW doesn't know how to manipulate habitat...oh perhaps ...some may know, but just to lazy to want to get dirty doing it. Easier to keep discussing it in meetings and writing new plans from decade to decade.How is F&W supposed to improve the habitat when they don't own it? Most of that land down there is owned by private timber companies that are in for the money.I know on the coast DNR/F&W are doing something about elk habitat on state land, but how are they supposed to do anything on private land?
The key statement...."There is a very good reason why the winter kill around St. Helen's is so great, it's because the habitat can not handle the herd size."Absolutely true......but what is a shame is that WDFW would rather meet and discuss problems like this than actually do something on the ground to improve it. It's like your yard isn't going to mow itself.....you have to get off your butt and do it it. Oh...and don't tell me all those thousands of dollars worth of seed aerial dropped on the old river bed of rocks and some sand years ago was doing what I would call habitat improvement. What a joke. The problem exists because WDFW doesn't know how to manipulate habitat...oh perhaps ...some may know, but just to lazy to want to get dirty doing it. Easier to keep discussing it in meetings and writing new plans from decade to decade.
It would be a major production to modify/improve enough habitat to save them all.Many people have been able to enjoy the booming population thanks to the eruption and many public and private entities. Now it seems as if we are faced with the population bust due to declining habitat.It is what it is. There are too many elk for the habitat and the private/timber industry is not going to provide much help for a herd that is over capacity.
Burn the unit? Clearcut the whole unit? Those trees aren't even 30 years old... Why don't we get elk numbers back to what they were pre-1980 and quit bitchin'? There ain't nothing in that herd anyways. Special permits that no one can draw where a guy hunts a bunch of raghorn bulls.
The St. Helens area can support a lot more elk if managed differently...and they wouldn't starve. It however will takes time and money lots and that is the issue nobodys got either.
Can I at least see the numbers that constitute this "Slaughter" before I jump to any conclusions and rip into WDFW. I've heard people complain that decisions aren't based on Biology, I've done it myself. This one sounds like it makes sense on the surface. Can we get a link or see the numbers
There are federal programs available for these types of projects..