Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: lokidog on January 03, 2021, 04:51:28 AMQuote from: idaho guy on January 02, 2021, 08:45:57 PMQuote from: Hydrophilic on December 30, 2020, 09:23:54 PMQuote from: hunt6226 on December 30, 2020, 08:41:14 PMThe proposal should be put all the wolves in the cities where their protection is voted in Well fortunately federal land is geared toward multi use and placed in trust for all citizens, and our wildlife is also placed in trust for the public. It seems fitting to me the public having input on how their trust lands and wildlife are managed. That is the beautiful thing about this country, thank you Mr. Roosevelt. Teddy Roosevelt is probably rolling over in his grave over the stupidity of this one. Ballot box wildlife management was never part of the North American wildlife model, which I agree is most successful wildlife management plan in the world. Ballot box wildlife management will be the ruin of what mr Roosevelt’s gift to us was. There is over 25 years of firsthand documented facts that disprove every lie the biologist told us in Idaho 25 years ago. They are using the EXACT talking points to reintroduce wolves to Colorado right now. It’s all been shown to be bullcrap which we thought anyways but now it’s proven with decades of on the ground evidence. It’s a shame to see this but oh well have fun with the wolves Colorado.This is the key point right here! Whether you like or dislike wolves, THIS IS IT!Ballot box wildlife management was never part of the North American wildlife model, which I agree is most successful wildlife management plan in the world. Ballot box wildlife management will be the ruin of what mr Roosevelt’s gift to us was.A central tenet of the NAMWC is that the wildlife are owned by the people - a stark contrast to the days of game being owned by the king. In that sense, I disagree with these proclamations that 'ballot box management' is not part of the NAMWC. If the people who own the wildlife choose to do something by a vote of the people, that is their prerogative...however strenuously I or other hunters may dislike the outcome. Reintroducing wolves, banning bear baiting and hounds, allocating a certain percentage of elk tags to non-residents are all value judgments which will vary based on the electorate...the 'owners'. While science may provide information about how introducing an apex predator will effect other species and their habitat, it really is up to the 'owners' to decide what they prefer...in Colorado (and probably Washington if there were ever a similar vote!) a majority prefer wolves on the landscape, even if that means fewer elk and deer.
Quote from: idaho guy on January 02, 2021, 08:45:57 PMQuote from: Hydrophilic on December 30, 2020, 09:23:54 PMQuote from: hunt6226 on December 30, 2020, 08:41:14 PMThe proposal should be put all the wolves in the cities where their protection is voted in Well fortunately federal land is geared toward multi use and placed in trust for all citizens, and our wildlife is also placed in trust for the public. It seems fitting to me the public having input on how their trust lands and wildlife are managed. That is the beautiful thing about this country, thank you Mr. Roosevelt. Teddy Roosevelt is probably rolling over in his grave over the stupidity of this one. Ballot box wildlife management was never part of the North American wildlife model, which I agree is most successful wildlife management plan in the world. Ballot box wildlife management will be the ruin of what mr Roosevelt’s gift to us was. There is over 25 years of firsthand documented facts that disprove every lie the biologist told us in Idaho 25 years ago. They are using the EXACT talking points to reintroduce wolves to Colorado right now. It’s all been shown to be bullcrap which we thought anyways but now it’s proven with decades of on the ground evidence. It’s a shame to see this but oh well have fun with the wolves Colorado.This is the key point right here! Whether you like or dislike wolves, THIS IS IT!Ballot box wildlife management was never part of the North American wildlife model, which I agree is most successful wildlife management plan in the world. Ballot box wildlife management will be the ruin of what mr Roosevelt’s gift to us was.
Quote from: Hydrophilic on December 30, 2020, 09:23:54 PMQuote from: hunt6226 on December 30, 2020, 08:41:14 PMThe proposal should be put all the wolves in the cities where their protection is voted in Well fortunately federal land is geared toward multi use and placed in trust for all citizens, and our wildlife is also placed in trust for the public. It seems fitting to me the public having input on how their trust lands and wildlife are managed. That is the beautiful thing about this country, thank you Mr. Roosevelt. Teddy Roosevelt is probably rolling over in his grave over the stupidity of this one. Ballot box wildlife management was never part of the North American wildlife model, which I agree is most successful wildlife management plan in the world. Ballot box wildlife management will be the ruin of what mr Roosevelt’s gift to us was. There is over 25 years of firsthand documented facts that disprove every lie the biologist told us in Idaho 25 years ago. They are using the EXACT talking points to reintroduce wolves to Colorado right now. It’s all been shown to be bullcrap which we thought anyways but now it’s proven with decades of on the ground evidence. It’s a shame to see this but oh well have fun with the wolves Colorado.
Quote from: hunt6226 on December 30, 2020, 08:41:14 PMThe proposal should be put all the wolves in the cities where their protection is voted in Well fortunately federal land is geared toward multi use and placed in trust for all citizens, and our wildlife is also placed in trust for the public. It seems fitting to me the public having input on how their trust lands and wildlife are managed. That is the beautiful thing about this country, thank you Mr. Roosevelt.
The proposal should be put all the wolves in the cities where their protection is voted in
I elk hunt with wolves and have not noticed a change in success
Why do some things go to the ballot and others not? There is no bright clear line and of course it varies by state, but its usually bigger, statewide policy issues of political importance/significance/interest. The 'feely/emotional' stuff typically arrives out of political interest. We don't put up ballot measures for smaller, less significant issues (e.g., to adjust quality elk permits in the colockum) but there is still a public process for setting those numbers. We may not get what we individually want, but in general the NAMWC facilitates public input on the management of public resources...and as we all know, even one user group (hunters) do not uniformly agree on any given set of values or decisions...which can make things tough even for well intentioned wildlife managers.
Quote from: idahohuntr on January 03, 2021, 10:36:41 AMQuote from: lokidog on January 03, 2021, 04:51:28 AMQuote from: idaho guy on January 02, 2021, 08:45:57 PMQuote from: Hydrophilic on December 30, 2020, 09:23:54 PMQuote from: hunt6226 on December 30, 2020, 08:41:14 PMThe proposal should be put all the wolves in the cities where their protection is voted in Well fortunately federal land is geared toward multi use and placed in trust for all citizens, and our wildlife is also placed in trust for the public. It seems fitting to me the public having input on how their trust lands and wildlife are managed. That is the beautiful thing about this country, thank you Mr. Roosevelt. Teddy Roosevelt is probably rolling over in his grave over the stupidity of this one. Ballot box wildlife management was never part of the North American wildlife model, which I agree is most successful wildlife management plan in the world. Ballot box wildlife management will be the ruin of what mr Roosevelt’s gift to us was. There is over 25 years of firsthand documented facts that disprove every lie the biologist told us in Idaho 25 years ago. They are using the EXACT talking points to reintroduce wolves to Colorado right now. It’s all been shown to be bullcrap which we thought anyways but now it’s proven with decades of on the ground evidence. It’s a shame to see this but oh well have fun with the wolves Colorado.This is the key point right here! Whether you like or dislike wolves, THIS IS IT!Ballot box wildlife management was never part of the North American wildlife model, which I agree is most successful wildlife management plan in the world. Ballot box wildlife management will be the ruin of what mr Roosevelt’s gift to us was.A central tenet of the NAMWC is that the wildlife are owned by the people - a stark contrast to the days of game being owned by the king. In that sense, I disagree with these proclamations that 'ballot box management' is not part of the NAMWC. If the people who own the wildlife choose to do something by a vote of the people, that is their prerogative...however strenuously I or other hunters may dislike the outcome. Reintroducing wolves, banning bear baiting and hounds, allocating a certain percentage of elk tags to non-residents are all value judgments which will vary based on the electorate...the 'owners'. While science may provide information about how introducing an apex predator will effect other species and their habitat, it really is up to the 'owners' to decide what they prefer...in Colorado (and probably Washington if there were ever a similar vote!) a majority prefer wolves on the landscape, even if that means fewer elk and deer. I didn’t say as owners we shouldn’t have a say we shouldn’t ask the game departments to manage all the wildlife on our behalf but cherry pick certain decisions that we get to decide. Game departments are either given authority to manage the resources or they are not. Picking highly emotional issues that have massive implications shouldn’t be independently “managed” by a bunch of city people who spend almost no time in the woods. If we can vote on all these predators we should vote on deer and elk seasons ALL of them.I have a vote for the state of Washington right now. All those Trophy elk areas you are waiting 20 years to draw but native Americans can hunt with no limits(one of which is an Idaho tribe not even living there) vote on open season for all hunters until the tribes decide to also regulate their harvest? Why aren’t we voting on these seasons if we get to vote on all the predator issues.? Key tenant of North American wildlife model is public ownership of wildlife but historically we had the wisdom to defer management to a paid group of professionals. If we need to vote on predators we need to vote on prey seasons too. You defer management or you don’t as an owner. I pray we collectively defer management as much as we all can find fault in our game departments
Quote from: idahohuntr on January 03, 2021, 10:36:41 AMQuote from: lokidog on January 03, 2021, 04:51:28 AMQuote from: idaho guy on January 02, 2021, 08:45:57 PMQuote from: Hydrophilic on December 30, 2020, 09:23:54 PMQuote from: hunt6226 on December 30, 2020, 08:41:14 PMThe proposal should be put all the wolves in the cities where their protection is voted in Well fortunately federal land is geared toward multi use and placed in trust for all citizens, and our wildlife is also placed in trust for the public. It seems fitting to me the public having input on how their trust lands and wildlife are managed. That is the beautiful thing about this country, thank you Mr. Roosevelt. Teddy Roosevelt is probably rolling over in his grave over the stupidity of this one. Ballot box wildlife management was never part of the North American wildlife model, which I agree is most successful wildlife management plan in the world. Ballot box wildlife management will be the ruin of what mr Roosevelt’s gift to us was. There is over 25 years of firsthand documented facts that disprove every lie the biologist told us in Idaho 25 years ago. They are using the EXACT talking points to reintroduce wolves to Colorado right now. It’s all been shown to be bullcrap which we thought anyways but now it’s proven with decades of on the ground evidence. It’s a shame to see this but oh well have fun with the wolves Colorado.This is the key point right here! Whether you like or dislike wolves, THIS IS IT!Ballot box wildlife management was never part of the North American wildlife model, which I agree is most successful wildlife management plan in the world. Ballot box wildlife management will be the ruin of what mr Roosevelt’s gift to us was.A central tenet of the NAMWC is that the wildlife are owned by the people - a stark contrast to the days of game being owned by the king. In that sense, I disagree with these proclamations that 'ballot box management' is not part of the NAMWC. If the people who own the wildlife choose to do something by a vote of the people, that is their prerogative...however strenuously I or other hunters may dislike the outcome. Reintroducing wolves, banning bear baiting and hounds, allocating a certain percentage of elk tags to non-residents are all value judgments which will vary based on the electorate...the 'owners'. While science may provide information about how introducing an apex predator will effect other species and their habitat, it really is up to the 'owners' to decide what they prefer...in Colorado (and probably Washington if there were ever a similar vote!) a majority prefer wolves on the landscape, even if that means fewer elk and deer. Well stated.
If the ballot box said to eradicate all wolves in their respective state, such as Wyoming, then would idahohunter and hydro support that?Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
Quote from: KFhunter on January 03, 2021, 11:29:57 AMIf the ballot box said to eradicate all wolves in their respective state, such as Wyoming, then would idahohunter and hydro support that?Sent from my SM-G965U using TapatalkIDH?Hydro?Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
For Hydro We've had these wolf discussions for years here on HW, and for years we've had members saying wolves won't impact hunting, yet here we're now seeing APR restrictions in dist 1 for whitetail deer limiting to 4pt and above which is unprecedented, our herds are collapsing.We've seen big reductions to moose permits, and lost most cow elk hunts. Youth moose has (1) permit available lol.And we're not done yet, the next 3 year cycle will see more reductions yet. Read through some of the mega threads dating back 8-10 years in the wolf section and see who says what, most of these very vocal pro-wolf members from the past are now silent on the issue.
Look no further than the Lolo zone in Idaho or the Yellowstone herd in MT for answers. Both of those herds used to provide some of the best elk hunting in the world, now the hunting seasons in those areas that once provided trophy animals and freezers full of meat have greatly reduced seasons and in some cases the seasons have been eliminated entirely.