Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Gentrys on April 09, 2020, 10:50:34 PMHere's what is going to happen... One idiot who goes on this eradication is going to share pictures of his group's kills, including the nannies and kids. When the public sees these pictures, which they will, it's going to be one of the biggest BLACK EYES our hunting community has ever seen. The kind of fuel the anti-hunting groups thrive on. And I wouldn't consider this a hunt gentlemen. The idea of pulling the trigger on a bunch of young goats is wrong IMO, regardless of the Fed's reasons. leave it to the hired guns, WDFW is just looking for a bunch of scapegoats to help begin the end of hunting in WA.
Here's what is going to happen... One idiot who goes on this eradication is going to share pictures of his group's kills, including the nannies and kids. When the public sees these pictures, which they will, it's going to be one of the biggest BLACK EYES our hunting community has ever seen. The kind of fuel the anti-hunting groups thrive on. And I wouldn't consider this a hunt gentlemen. The idea of pulling the trigger on a bunch of young goats is wrong IMO, regardless of the Fed's reasons.
Another thing that I think is worth noting is that even for the best hunters this might not be a high success rate hunt. Not like a normal OIL. They’re doing more live captures this summer and are taking everything out of there they can. I think this hunt is just to clean up the final holdouts. I don’t think it’s going to be a bloodbath because it could be legitimately difficult to locate a goat. In some of the units there may not even be any goats left.
It seems ironic that for years whenever there has been a need to cull animals and hired groups are used to remove them, the hue and cry of “why don’t they use hunters?” rings loudly.Now there is an offer to use hunters and many can’t seem to run away fast enough.
Quote from: Bob33 on April 10, 2020, 07:59:21 AMIt seems ironic that for years whenever there has been a need to cull animals and hired groups are used to remove them, the hue and cry of “why don’t they use hunters?” rings loudly.Now there is an offer to use hunters and many can’t seem to run away fast enough.But this offer seems to request indiscriminate killing to wipe them out completely (i know, they want them extirpated) and will likely result in a good amount of meat left to waste. Guys shooting a female and several juveniles, leaving a bunch of meat for scavengers, wiping out the population, its a bit different deal than allowing hunters tags to thin out say an elk population to a more reasonable level, with one animal per hunter, where the animal will be recovered, to protect against crop damage for example. Whole different scenario and type of publicity involved.
This is pretty straight forward. This is a non native species causing damage to the ecosystem they've found themselves in. In the North American model of wildlife management there are many, many examples of times species were introduced long before anyone knew what was going on, only to be completely eradicated from an area decades later. That is what is unfolding here. This is not meant to be the hunt of a lifetime. It the NPS using volunteers to complete a task. As members of the conservation community hunters have been called on (across the country) to participate in these types of operations many times over the years. If you have hiked in any of these areas recently, you may have experienced the goats coming into your campsite, or staring you down while you eat lunch. You may end up glassing a Billy across snow capped peaks. You'll likely be directed where to go and will participate in a cull. Despite the "this isn't conservation, this isn't hunting" rhetoric, this is exactly what conservation looks like, and it was not meant to be a hunt. It is going to be a hard, ugly job doing things a lot of people don't like doing to improve habitat for future generations. This was what science based management looks like vs. but my feelings say we should just leave them management. It's not always the way we wish it could be.