Free: Contests & Raffles.
If the general season harvest rates don’t show a decline in elk harvested numbers, I don’t know what does. IMO, the special permits are just a trickle down. Someone is not managing our game properly. I don’t think it really has to do with predators, more so, miscalculating how many elk an area can sustain and issuing special permits based on those inaccurate figures
I didn't know cougars were spree killers, I've always heard the opposite until now. So when they spree kill do they still cover every kill and drag them off?
Quote from: SuperX on April 28, 2019, 10:05:35 AMI didn't know cougars were spree killers, I've always heard the opposite until now. So when they spree kill do they still cover every kill and drag them off?I have found several recent cougar kills in the same proximity. They were both covered and appeared to have been dead about the same amount of time. Both showed little signs of having been eaten.
Quote from: SuperX on April 28, 2019, 10:05:35 AMI didn't know cougars were spree killers, I've always heard the opposite until now. So when they spree kill do they still cover every kill and drag them off?Just one animal usually gets drug off from what I've seen. The rest are left laying where they died. Bobcats do it too, like when they get into a bird pen. Kill all the ducks or chickens and then only take one to eat.
Fair enough but I would argue that it's fairly irrelevant. Its 2019 not 1975. I in no way mean that as an insult or an "old timer" remark but management is never ending and always changing. Even at a 5 year low we still have a robust elk herd in yakima compared to what we had back when hounds were running around. So if predators have exploded like some have said why havent elk populations continually plummeted? I wanna connect the dots more than anyone but the dots dont line up
I'm still trying to get my head around the health of our herds and the role of predators in their decline. I've come to the back-of-the-napkin conclusion that our biggest addressable problem is the cougars. Looking at wolves, cougars and man only, here are some rough yearly numbers I've come up with to help me 'get it'. Based on the 2018 harvest stats, combined deer/elk kills by hunters were ~32,000. Wolves @ 20 deer a year (WI DNR numbers) for 126 wolves, leaves another ~2500 eaten. WDFW estimated 2000 - 2500 cougar in the state back in 2015. At the same 20 deer/elk a year for cats, they would account for ~40,000 - 50,000 eaten a year. All told, we would be seeing ~80,000 deer/elk EATEN per year without considering fawn mortality, predator spree killing, poaching, conflict management, killed but not recovered by hunters, vehicle mortality, death by disease / natural causes, or tribal hunting as factors.The 2018 harvest report showed 220 cats killed and registered by hunters potentially saving 4500 deer/elk. Almost all of the areas open for hunting cougars met or exceeded harvest objectives for those areas, meaning there isn't much more we can do to limit the largest source of ungulate mortality without more tags.I also looked at the 300 GMUs and the quota for them is only 23 cougars on the top end while the herd is struggling so badly that many are leaving the state to elk hunt. It sure makes you scratch your head.
Good thing we don't have grizzlies and disease to deal with as well.