Free: Contests & Raffles.
I started hunting Oregon in 07. Wish I had started putting in for some of the good elk permits then, but didnt. Now it is too late. Odds are worse as a non res to draw some of the premier units. I just go OTC and cannot complain.
Quote from: Crunchy on June 20, 2019, 08:33:26 AMI started hunting Oregon in 07. Wish I had started putting in for some of the good elk permits then, but didnt. Now it is too late. Odds are worse as a non res to draw some of the premier units. I just go OTC and cannot complain.I grew up in Oregon. But my family didn't play the points game. I didn't start building points until my late 30s. And moved to WA in my 40s. Kick myself as I could have drawn the big 3 elk at least once by now (when I was a res) or an antelope. Luckily Oregon lets you keep your points and DFW number when you move out of state. I'm now just banking points only until I move back to our OR residence. Given the limited number of non res tags, point creep will keep me from ever likely drawing in the 75% pool on the hard to get tags as a nonres (and 25% pool draws are pretty much impossible on those harder tags). Thankfully Oregon has decent OTC hunts.
Oregon doesn't have OTC muzzleloader hunts, or east side OTC deer rifle, and very limited east side OTC rifle elk. And most of the state is OTC for archery elk and deer. So declaring weapon would be problematic for many residents on the east side that want to hunt every year as their family tradition....they would be forced to archery hunt or drive hundreds of miles to rifle OTC. Wouldn't be fair to those east side residents. Portlanders could put in for rifle every year east side and then just hunt OTC near home of they didn't draw.
Just more points for me, as expected, 5 for antelope, 18 for deer and 22 for elk.