Free: Contests & Raffles.
Here's an easy one: year round rabbits.We can hunt them year round in Oregon and it's not like they all get shot out. Hunting is best in June when all the really stupid ones are hopping around and are the perfect age for eating. They're good introductory game and perfect for kids, but I'm definitely not going out for them during Washington's season because there's too many other things to hunt at that time of year.
Quote from: GBoyd on August 14, 2018, 08:03:00 PMHere's an easy one: year round rabbits.We can hunt them year round in Oregon and it's not like they all get shot out. Hunting is best in June when all the really stupid ones are hopping around and are the perfect age for eating. They're good introductory game and perfect for kids, but I'm definitely not going out for them during Washington's season because there's too many other things to hunt at that time of year.Please expand on your experience in Oregon... We dont have the jackrabbits like Easter Oregon has... Certainly not in any numbers that ive heard of...
Stop rotetone-ing lakesMake commercial pay for their enforcement
Quote from: Special T on August 14, 2018, 08:11:25 PMQuote from: GBoyd on August 14, 2018, 08:03:00 PMHere's an easy one: year round rabbits.We can hunt them year round in Oregon and it's not like they all get shot out. Hunting is best in June when all the really stupid ones are hopping around and are the perfect age for eating. They're good introductory game and perfect for kids, but I'm definitely not going out for them during Washington's season because there's too many other things to hunt at that time of year.Please expand on your experience in Oregon... We dont have the jackrabbits like Easter Oregon has... Certainly not in any numbers that ive heard of...I don't do the jackrabbit shoots, but we have a good and stable population of cottontails over the whole state. I can't think of any reason that Washington would need a closed season. I believe that rabbits are able to withstand enormous amounts of pressure without problems. Anyone that has tried to clear a farm of them can attest to that.Basically, there's no biological reason that it closes in Washington, just tradition and not enough rabbit hunters out there anymore to bring it up at the meetings.
Quote from: Dhoey07 on August 14, 2018, 09:06:30 PMStop rotetone-ing lakes. there are sound biological reasons for this in many circumstances, but agree it is abused by “purist” WDFW bios to return a minimally viable native species to a great mixed “non-native” fishing areaMake commercial pay for their enforcement “IIRC states are only minimally responsible for commercial enforcement and reimbursed through taxes already assessed. Interesting thought
Stop rotetone-ing lakes. there are sound biological reasons for this in many circumstances, but agree it is abused by “purist” WDFW bios to return a minimally viable native species to a great mixed “non-native” fishing areaMake commercial pay for their enforcement “IIRC states are only minimally responsible for commercial enforcement and reimbursed through taxes already assessed.
Make commercial pay for their enforcement
Stand up to the tribes. Skoks come to mind. WDFW has a hatchery that feeds the Skok river but the Skoks lay claim to the river and I see them run nets all the way across it within 100 yards of the hatchery. And I don't even fish it!