Free: Contests & Raffles.
The challenge right now is trying to explain and via posts the intricacies of Tribes, the culture, the lifestyle and the meaning. I could give it a try but then I'd be writing a very lengthy short book and spending probably hours typing it.It's a conversation best given in-person.
On Jan. 8, a game warden for the Crow Tribe of southeastern Montana went before the United States Supreme Court. Clayvin Herrera was convicted by the State of Wyoming of killing a bull elk out of season, without a license in January 2014. Two of his companions, who also shot bulls after following the herd off the Crow Reservation across the state line into the Bighorn National Forest, both pleaded guilty to the same poaching charges and paid fines. Herrera however, has argued all the way to the highest court in the land that the 1868 Second Treaty of Fort Laramie guarantees his tribal “right to hunt on the unoccupied lands of the United States so long as game may be found thereon.”
Herrera insists that he did not mean to cross into Wyoming that day five years ago, but still it was his right to do so. Above all, he says, he was just trying to provide meat for his three daughters.“That was a time when the tribe was in recession bad. And they cut our hours. They cut our pay,” Herrera testified on the witness stand. “I was cut down to like 32 hours a week. They cut me down to like $10 an hour. And growing kids, they eat more than me now, but the plan was to get an elk to eat it. Live off it.”Which is why they found a fourth bull there left untouched? SMH.
https://hunting-washington.com/smf/index.php/topic,232948.msg3107655.html#msg3107655