Free: Contests & Raffles.
I have the “data” for all Idaho units and it’s all pretty similar. The dates change as the wolves migrated to nee areas then you see the impact regionally. I have also looked up overall harvest from the idfg for those time frames and it obviously shows the same decline. 13 years of aggressive wolf management has helped a lot but it took a few years of hunting and trapping before we saw any benefits. There is a ton of information that all support the fact that wolves eat elk, the more wolves you have the less elk you will have. We don’t really need graphs and data to understand that do we ? Back to the topic I have no resentment against natives hunting because I don’t and never have hunted Washington. As a lover of elk I think it’s absurd that one user group has a year round unlimited season on a herd facing massive challenges(wolves,bears,lions) and I’m sure at least some loss of habitat. To ignore this fact and just focus on everything else is wrong. Can you change it? You won’t know if you don’t try. I already said it’s in the best interest of the tribe to have some reasonable regulations. It has nothing to do with taking away their rights but at least have some common sense. I think a lot of people don’t want to speak up because they fear not being politically correct. That b.s. the elk need a voice
Lots of internet knowledge that perpetuates the divide. Many in this thread wouldn't know an ally simply because they are closed minded and at times ignorant. The tribes have a vested interest in strong ungulate herds and work diligently to achieve this. Also if its about strong herd numbers, male preference in harvest is always preferable, period. Any bull, whether its a 100 inch bull or 400 inch bull, is a better choice for herd growth than a cow. Also the spike harvest strategy employed by the wdfw is a choice which roots much of the jealousy spewed in these threads. There are many different harvest strategies that can accomplish biological minimums to achieve pregnancy rates that promote stable herds. The true issue is predators as well as agricultural influence which not only competes for prime habitat but also has a dedicated section with significant harvest throughout the state. It was less than a decade ago when the Yakima herd was growing at an unsustainable rate according to wdfw, only two things have changed, damage section was created and predators remained unchecked. Tribal harvest has been static to decreasing to the best of my knowledge. I do not claim to know what all tribes harvest but I do have a limited knowledge of harvest numbers.
Can you post the tribal harvest numbers for all tribes in Washington for deer and elk in WA? Can you post the units they were harvested in too and the ratio of 5x5 or larger bulls to spikes harvested and the percentage of 4x4 or larger bucks and the units harvested in? Just the last 25 years so as not to make it too time consuming. Im sure since the tribes have such a vested interest in a healthy ungulate populations( as you stated in your post) they keep better records than WDFW. Do they examine teeth too for age determination?Can you post a 25 year graph of the Yakama and Puyallup tribal harvest spefically from the Yakama elk herd the past 25 years as you stated they had no affect on herd numbers. Can you post a graph of tribal permits issued too. Im curious where on the Yakama Rez do they register their harvests? Is it done online? How many hunting violations have the tribal game wardens issued the past 10 years to tribal members?I would be interested in the tribal harvest data from the Blues elk and deer herds too.thanksQuote from: Tbar on July 03, 2021, 10:45:12 PMLots of internet knowledge that perpetuates the divide. Many in this thread wouldn't know an ally simply because they are closed minded and at times ignorant. The tribes have a vested interest in strong ungulate herds and work diligently to achieve this. Also if its about strong herd numbers, male preference in harvest is always preferable, period. Any bull, whether its a 100 inch bull or 400 inch bull, is a better choice for herd growth than a cow. Also the spike harvest strategy employed by the wdfw is a choice which roots much of the jealousy spewed in these threads. There are many different harvest strategies that can accomplish biological minimums to achieve pregnancy rates that promote stable herds. The true issue is predators as well as agricultural influence which not only competes for prime habitat but also has a dedicated section with significant harvest throughout the state. It was less than a decade ago when the Yakima herd was growing at an unsustainable rate according to wdfw, only two things have changed, damage section was created and predators remained unchecked. Tribal harvest has been static to decreasing to the best of my knowledge. I do not claim to know what all tribes harvest but I do have a limited knowledge of harvest numbers.
Quote from: idaho guy on July 04, 2021, 07:26:21 AMI have the “data” for all Idaho units and it’s all pretty similar. The dates change as the wolves migrated to nee areas then you see the impact regionally. I have also looked up overall harvest from the idfg for those time frames and it obviously shows the same decline. 13 years of aggressive wolf management has helped a lot but it took a few years of hunting and trapping before we saw any benefits. There is a ton of information that all support the fact that wolves eat elk, the more wolves you have the less elk you will have. We don’t really need graphs and data to understand that do we ? Back to the topic I have no resentment against natives hunting because I don’t and never have hunted Washington. As a lover of elk I think it’s absurd that one user group has a year round unlimited season on a herd facing massive challenges(wolves,bears,lions) and I’m sure at least some loss of habitat. To ignore this fact and just focus on everything else is wrong. Can you change it? You won’t know if you don’t try. I already said it’s in the best interest of the tribe to have some reasonable regulations. It has nothing to do with taking away their rights but at least have some common sense. I think a lot of people don’t want to speak up because they fear not being politically correct. That b.s. the elk need a voiceFirst off thank you for the data. I only looked up what was quickly available and more specifically the panhandle. I'm not sure what is considered north Idaho. I also have talked in detail with idfg representatives. They said Selway and Lolo are hit the hardest but (according to them) most units in the state have adapted and elk hunting is stable. I agree that they are marketing and I can get the name of person I communicated with but he was very anti wolf. As for regulations, tribes do have them. More specifically, I am not really quick to judge a tribe for having a year round season on bull elk and a 3 month season on cows when the state runs an arbitrary ad hoc season on cows from July 1st to March 31st with significant harvest and their main widget of success is dead cow elk. Now if I'm looking at herd drivers I'll advocate for the herd drivers (cows) and allow more liberal bull harvest. Switch gears and discuss priorities, agricultural business vs treaty rights, I would again advocate for a formal agreement in the treaty which is firmly backed by sticky VI paragraph 2. Like always there is considerably more than meets the eye and many minds will not change regardless of commitments to resource management by tribes. I also acknowledge the need for agribusiness in this state as well as it being a key component of treaty negotiation. Wildlife in general has not received a fair representation and we are definitely weighted to the detriment of wildlife in overarching comprehensive management schemes.
Quote from: ribka on July 04, 2021, 10:28:09 AMCan you post the tribal harvest numbers for all tribes in Washington for deer and elk in WA? Can you post the units they were harvested in too and the ratio of 5x5 or larger bulls to spikes harvested and the percentage of 4x4 or larger bucks and the units harvested in? Just the last 25 years so as not to make it too time consuming. Im sure since the tribes have such a vested interest in a healthy ungulate populations( as you stated in your post) they keep better records than WDFW. Do they examine teeth too for age determination?Can you post a 25 year graph of the Yakama and Puyallup tribal harvest spefically from the Yakama elk herd the past 25 years as you stated they had no affect on herd numbers. Can you post a graph of tribal permits issued too. Im curious where on the Yakama Rez do they register their harvests? Is it done online? How many hunting violations have the tribal game wardens issued the past 10 years to tribal members?I would be interested in the tribal harvest data from the Blues elk and deer herds too.thanksQuote from: Tbar on July 03, 2021, 10:45:12 PMLots of internet knowledge that perpetuates the divide. Many in this thread wouldn't know an ally simply because they are closed minded and at times ignorant. The tribes have a vested interest in strong ungulate herds and work diligently to achieve this. Also if its about strong herd numbers, male preference in harvest is always preferable, period. Any bull, whether its a 100 inch bull or 400 inch bull, is a better choice for herd growth than a cow. Also the spike harvest strategy employed by the wdfw is a choice which roots much of the jealousy spewed in these threads. There are many different harvest strategies that can accomplish biological minimums to achieve pregnancy rates that promote stable herds. The true issue is predators as well as agricultural influence which not only competes for prime habitat but also has a dedicated section with significant harvest throughout the state. It was less than a decade ago when the Yakima herd was growing at an unsustainable rate according to wdfw, only two things have changed, damage section was created and predators remained unchecked. Tribal harvest has been static to decreasing to the best of my knowledge. I do not claim to know what all tribes harvest but I do have a limited knowledge of harvest numbers. Excellent comment!! I may be going out on a limb here, but no way you will get that info!!!
Quote from: idaho guy on July 04, 2021, 07:26:21 AMI have the “data” for all Idaho units and it’s all pretty similar. The dates change as the wolves migrated to nee areas then you see the impact regionally. I have also looked up overall harvest from the idfg for those time frames and it obviously shows the same decline. 13 years of aggressive wolf management has helped a lot but it took a few years of hunting and trapping before we saw any benefits. There is a ton of information that all support the fact that wolves eat elk, the more wolves you have the less elk you will have. We don’t really need graphs and data to understand that do we ? Back to the topic I have no resentment against natives hunting because I don’t and never have hunted Washington. As a lover of elk I think it’s absurd that one user group has a year round unlimited season on a herd facing massive challenges(wolves,bears,lions) and I’m sure at least some loss of habitat. To ignore this fact and just focus on everything else is wrong. Can you change it? You won’t know if you don’t try. I already said it’s in the best interest of the tribe to have some reasonable regulations. It has nothing to do with taking away their rights but at least have some common sense. I think a lot of people don’t want to speak up because they fear not being politically correct. That b.s. the elk need a voicethank you for taking the time to post, you nailed it again, especially in your last paragraph ! The zero limits on deer and elk issue seems to always get deflected to an ignorance or taking away of tribal rights deal. The question remains, as it always has! How the F can you manage herds when certain people have ZERO management and NO limits. And if numbers and stats are so important, WHERE are the yakamas numbers?? And would they contain ANY factual info? I’ve said this a hundred times but I’ll say it again. Not all tribes are abusers and have no management, some do it well.
Quote from: ribka on July 04, 2021, 10:28:09 AMCan you post the tribal harvest numbers for all tribes in Washington for deer and elk in WA? Can you post the units they were harvested in too and the ratio of 5x5 or larger bulls to spikes harvested and the percentage of 4x4 or larger bucks and the units harvested in? Just the last 25 years so as not to make it too time consuming. Im sure since the tribes have such a vested interest in a healthy ungulate populations( as you stated in your post) they keep better records than WDFW. Do they examine teeth too for age determination?Can you post a 25 year graph of the Yakama and Puyallup tribal harvest spefically from the Yakama elk herd the past 25 years as you stated they had no affect on herd numbers. Can you post a graph of tribal permits issued too. Im curious where on the Yakama Rez do they register their harvests? Is it done online? How many hunting violations have the tribal game wardens issued the past 10 years to tribal members?I would be interested in the tribal harvest data from the Blues elk and deer herds too.thanksQuote from: Tbar on July 03, 2021, 10:45:12 PMLots of internet knowledge that perpetuates the divide. Many in this thread wouldn't know an ally simply because they are closed minded and at times ignorant. The tribes have a vested interest in strong ungulate herds and work diligently to achieve this. Also if its about strong herd numbers, male preference in harvest is always preferable, period. Any bull, whether its a 100 inch bull or 400 inch bull, is a better choice for herd growth than a cow. Also the spike harvest strategy employed by the wdfw is a choice which roots much of the jealousy spewed in these threads. There are many different harvest strategies that can accomplish biological minimums to achieve pregnancy rates that promote stable herds. The true issue is predators as well as agricultural influence which not only competes for prime habitat but also has a dedicated section with significant harvest throughout the state. It was less than a decade ago when the Yakima herd was growing at an unsustainable rate according to wdfw, only two things have changed, damage section was created and predators remained unchecked. Tribal harvest has been static to decreasing to the best of my knowledge. I do not claim to know what all tribes harvest but I do have a limited knowledge of harvest numbers.You cant just focus on Washington tribes….the Nez Perce, located in Idaho, harvest at will in the Southeast portion of the Blue Mountains, without fear of anything. You will never get any data or cooperation from them, as long as things remain status quo. I mentioned before, it’s not just Washington tribes. The Nez Perce put a serious smack down on the elk in the Blues.
Quote from: Tbar on July 03, 2021, 10:45:12 PMLots of internet knowledge that perpetuates the divide. Many in this thread wouldn't know an ally simply because they are closed minded and at times ignorant. The tribes have a vested interest in strong ungulate herds and work diligently to achieve this. Also if its about strong herd numbers, male preference in harvest is always preferable, period. Any bull, whether its a 100 inch bull or 400 inch bull, is a better choice for herd growth than a cow. Also the spike harvest strategy employed by the wdfw is a choice which roots much of the jealousy spewed in these threads. There are many different harvest strategies that can accomplish biological minimums to achieve pregnancy rates that promote stable herds. The true issue is predators as well as agricultural influence which not only competes for prime habitat but also has a dedicated section with significant harvest throughout the state. It was less than a decade ago when the Yakima herd was growing at an unsustainable rate according to wdfw, only two things have changed, damage section was created and predators remained unchecked. Tribal harvest has been static to decreasing to the best of my knowledge. I do not claim to know what all tribes harvest but I do have a limited knowledge of harvest numbers.Why aren’t damage prevention permits any bull then?
Quote from: Caseyd on July 05, 2021, 02:23:19 AMQuote from: Tbar on July 03, 2021, 10:45:12 PMLots of internet knowledge that perpetuates the divide. Many in this thread wouldn't know an ally simply because they are closed minded and at times ignorant. The tribes have a vested interest in strong ungulate herds and work diligently to achieve this. Also if its about strong herd numbers, male preference in harvest is always preferable, period. Any bull, whether its a 100 inch bull or 400 inch bull, is a better choice for herd growth than a cow. Also the spike harvest strategy employed by the wdfw is a choice which roots much of the jealousy spewed in these threads. There are many different harvest strategies that can accomplish biological minimums to achieve pregnancy rates that promote stable herds. The true issue is predators as well as agricultural influence which not only competes for prime habitat but also has a dedicated section with significant harvest throughout the state. It was less than a decade ago when the Yakima herd was growing at an unsustainable rate according to wdfw, only two things have changed, damage section was created and predators remained unchecked. Tribal harvest has been static to decreasing to the best of my knowledge. I do not claim to know what all tribes harvest but I do have a limited knowledge of harvest numbers.Why aren’t damage prevention permits any bull then?Because the intent often times with crop/damage permits is to reduce herd size...which is most effective through female harvest...not males.
Quote from: idahohuntr on July 06, 2021, 10:57:24 PMQuote from: Caseyd on July 05, 2021, 02:23:19 AMQuote from: Tbar on July 03, 2021, 10:45:12 PMLots of internet knowledge that perpetuates the divide. Many in this thread wouldn't know an ally simply because they are closed minded and at times ignorant. The tribes have a vested interest in strong ungulate herds and work diligently to achieve this. Also if its about strong herd numbers, male preference in harvest is always preferable, period. Any bull, whether its a 100 inch bull or 400 inch bull, is a better choice for herd growth than a cow. Also the spike harvest strategy employed by the wdfw is a choice which roots much of the jealousy spewed in these threads. There are many different harvest strategies that can accomplish biological minimums to achieve pregnancy rates that promote stable herds. The true issue is predators as well as agricultural influence which not only competes for prime habitat but also has a dedicated section with significant harvest throughout the state. It was less than a decade ago when the Yakima herd was growing at an unsustainable rate according to wdfw, only two things have changed, damage section was created and predators remained unchecked. Tribal harvest has been static to decreasing to the best of my knowledge. I do not claim to know what all tribes harvest but I do have a limited knowledge of harvest numbers.Why aren’t damage prevention permits any bull then?Because the intent often times with crop/damage permits is to reduce herd size...which is most effective through female harvest...not males.Damage permits are a double edge sword.Most property owners want the damage stoped.So reduced herd is really the only option.
Quote from: trophyhunt on July 04, 2021, 10:37:08 AMQuote from: ribka on July 04, 2021, 10:28:09 AMCan you post the tribal harvest numbers for all tribes in Washington for deer and elk in WA? Can you post the units they were harvested in too and the ratio of 5x5 or larger bulls to spikes harvested and the percentage of 4x4 or larger bucks and the units harvested in? Just the last 25 years so as not to make it too time consuming. Im sure since the tribes have such a vested interest in a healthy ungulate populations( as you stated in your post) they keep better records than WDFW. Do they examine teeth too for age determination?Can you post a 25 year graph of the Yakama and Puyallup tribal harvest spefically from the Yakama elk herd the past 25 years as you stated they had no affect on herd numbers. Can you post a graph of tribal permits issued too. Im curious where on the Yakama Rez do they register their harvests? Is it done online? How many hunting violations have the tribal game wardens issued the past 10 years to tribal members?I would be interested in the tribal harvest data from the Blues elk and deer herds too.thanksQuote from: Tbar on July 03, 2021, 10:45:12 PMLots of internet knowledge that perpetuates the divide. Many in this thread wouldn't know an ally simply because they are closed minded and at times ignorant. The tribes have a vested interest in strong ungulate herds and work diligently to achieve this. Also if its about strong herd numbers, male preference in harvest is always preferable, period. Any bull, whether its a 100 inch bull or 400 inch bull, is a better choice for herd growth than a cow. Also the spike harvest strategy employed by the wdfw is a choice which roots much of the jealousy spewed in these threads. There are many different harvest strategies that can accomplish biological minimums to achieve pregnancy rates that promote stable herds. The true issue is predators as well as agricultural influence which not only competes for prime habitat but also has a dedicated section with significant harvest throughout the state. It was less than a decade ago when the Yakima herd was growing at an unsustainable rate according to wdfw, only two things have changed, damage section was created and predators remained unchecked. Tribal harvest has been static to decreasing to the best of my knowledge. I do not claim to know what all tribes harvest but I do have a limited knowledge of harvest numbers. Excellent comment!! I may be going out on a limb here, but no way you will get that info!!!They dont have that information to give. They dont require it of their members.
I always chuckle when someone, who has no clue, throws in some platitude about tribes and wildlife management. Of course they don't and never will collect data as they could care less about healthy deer and elk herds. Please prove wrong with some actual data. This includes all of the tribes in the state. Just like not caring about salmon stocks when they place nets accross spawning rivers. Quote from: dvolmer on July 04, 2021, 10:40:43 AMQuote from: trophyhunt on July 04, 2021, 10:37:08 AMQuote from: ribka on July 04, 2021, 10:28:09 AMCan you post the tribal harvest numbers for all tribes in Washington for deer and elk in WA? Can you post the units they were harvested in too and the ratio of 5x5 or larger bulls to spikes harvested and the percentage of 4x4 or larger bucks and the units harvested in? Just the last 25 years so as not to make it too time consuming. Im sure since the tribes have such a vested interest in a healthy ungulate populations( as you stated in your post) they keep better records than WDFW. Do they examine teeth too for age determination?Can you post a 25 year graph of the Yakama and Puyallup tribal harvest spefically from the Yakama elk herd the past 25 years as you stated they had no affect on herd numbers. Can you post a graph of tribal permits issued too. Im curious where on the Yakama Rez do they register their harvests? Is it done online? How many hunting violations have the tribal game wardens issued the past 10 years to tribal members?I would be interested in the tribal harvest data from the Blues elk and deer herds too.thanksQuote from: Tbar on July 03, 2021, 10:45:12 PMLots of internet knowledge that perpetuates the divide. Many in this thread wouldn't know an ally simply because they are closed minded and at times ignorant. The tribes have a vested interest in strong ungulate herds and work diligently to achieve this. Also if its about strong herd numbers, male preference in harvest is always preferable, period. Any bull, whether its a 100 inch bull or 400 inch bull, is a better choice for herd growth than a cow. Also the spike harvest strategy employed by the wdfw is a choice which roots much of the jealousy spewed in these threads. There are many different harvest strategies that can accomplish biological minimums to achieve pregnancy rates that promote stable herds. The true issue is predators as well as agricultural influence which not only competes for prime habitat but also has a dedicated section with significant harvest throughout the state. It was less than a decade ago when the Yakima herd was growing at an unsustainable rate according to wdfw, only two things have changed, damage section was created and predators remained unchecked. Tribal harvest has been static to decreasing to the best of my knowledge. I do not claim to know what all tribes harvest but I do have a limited knowledge of harvest numbers. Excellent comment!! I may be going out on a limb here, but no way you will get that info!!!They dont have that information to give. They dont require it of their members.