Free: Contests & Raffles.
It's the timing that comes from herd bulls breeding that youre.missing which @DOUBLELUNG (who is uniquely qualified to comment on the subject) is pointing out
I would think removing point restrictions would eventually lead to only the lesser bulls breeding therefore breeding out the better genes leading to inferior health in herds
With the current system I am not a big fan of APR but it does keep opportunity while also somewhat maintaining bull to cow ratio.
Quote from: KFhunter on March 01, 2019, 04:14:13 PMI applaud the Colville's for doing something I cannot, but GAAAAAWWDang!!! does it stick in my craw they're doing things in the national forest that I cannot only because I'm white....I just can't get over it, pissing me off so bad. I don't blame the Indians at all, but I'm freaking hating on Washington bad.I didn't post this in wolves, can we stop with the racist BS?
I applaud the Colville's for doing something I cannot, but GAAAAAWWDang!!! does it stick in my craw they're doing things in the national forest that I cannot only because I'm white....I just can't get over it, pissing me off so bad. I don't blame the Indians at all, but I'm freaking hating on Washington bad.
But despite the supposed political correctness of Native American, it has not become the preferred term. "The acceptance of Native American has not brought about the demise of Indian," according to the fourth edition of the American Heritage Book of English Usage, published in 2000. "Unlike Negro, which was quickly stigmatized once black became preferred, Indian never fell out of favor with a large segment of the American population."Nor did the word Indian fall out of favor with the people it described. A 1995 Census Bureau survey that asked indigenous Americans their preferences for names (the last such survey done by the bureau) found that 49 percent preferred the term Indian, 37 percent Native American, and 3.6 percent "some other name." About 5 percent expressed no preference.Moreover, a large number of Indians actually strongly object to the term Native American for political reasons. In his 1998 essay "I Am An American Indian, Not a Native American!", Russell Means, a Lakota activist and a founder of the American Indian Movement (AIM), stated unequivocally, "I abhor the term 'Native American.'" He continues:
In addition to desynchronizing calving, having breeding done by yearlings and raghorns can result in reduced survival post-rut of those smaller bulls. When there are mature bulls in the herd, reproductive effort by young bulls is suppressed, and they go into fall and winter with higher fat reserves and better overwinter survival.
Quote from: SuperX on March 01, 2019, 04:30:23 PMQuote from: KFhunter on March 01, 2019, 04:14:13 PMI applaud the Colville's for doing something I cannot, but GAAAAAWWDang!!! does it stick in my craw they're doing things in the national forest that I cannot only because I'm white....I just can't get over it, pissing me off so bad. I don't blame the Indians at all, but I'm freaking hating on Washington bad.I didn't post this in wolves, can we stop with the racist BS?There's nothing racist about my post so best put on your big girl panties and quit being such a snowflake. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/roadshow/fts/bismarck_200504A16.htmlQuoteBut despite the supposed political correctness of Native American, it has not become the preferred term. "The acceptance of Native American has not brought about the demise of Indian," according to the fourth edition of the American Heritage Book of English Usage, published in 2000. "Unlike Negro, which was quickly stigmatized once black became preferred, Indian never fell out of favor with a large segment of the American population."Nor did the word Indian fall out of favor with the people it described. A 1995 Census Bureau survey that asked indigenous Americans their preferences for names (the last such survey done by the bureau) found that 49 percent preferred the term Indian, 37 percent Native American, and 3.6 percent "some other name." About 5 percent expressed no preference.Moreover, a large number of Indians actually strongly object to the term Native American for political reasons. In his 1998 essay "I Am An American Indian, Not a Native American!", Russell Means, a Lakota activist and a founder of the American Indian Movement (AIM), stated unequivocally, "I abhor the term 'Native American.'" He continues:So for your point of calling me a racist, you can go pound sand sir.To your point about predators...hey! if you want to ignore the elephant in the room and squabble over left overs that's your business, but don't expect the rest of us to do so. You didn't specify which elk herd or which location in your question. Each location has it's challenges and those challenges are quickly evolving. If predators haven't supplanted people in reducing the elk herd you're thinking about, be rest assured they soon will! Any discussion not talking about predator reduction is an exercise in futility.
Superx What is your idea exactly? Perhaps my reading comp is not working up to par, I basically read the thread title and your OP as asking if we can continue managing herds for quality versus quantity with unchecked predator control. My short answer is yes. I would argue we have to. I hunt westside in Wa, but from what I observe the BM, Colockum, and Yakima herds are all under siege. All units have reduced cow harvest, and limited antlered take in areas with true spike. Other than closing general seasons completely I am not sure there is a solution better than the current one. If we went to general bull seasons, and no antlereless take IMO we would have many more uncovered cows. You need covered cows to grow a herd, protect the cows by limiting take by permit and weapon, and protect the breeding age bulls through the draw. Hoof rot gets blamed ALOT for the demise of the SouthWest Washington elk herds, Its a terrible thing. But IMO its a drop in the bucket compared to the late december and January slaughter fests that began around 08 when WDFW mismanaged the herd so poorly and caved to big timber at sportsmans expense. Thousands of permits to the tune of 50 plus percent success rate, and your future along with that; it is going to wreak havoc. Its a scalpel and cuts may have been warranted, but instead of a one or two year plan they ran with it for the better part of a decade.