Free: Contests & Raffles.
I understand your sentiments, dvolmer, but like emac says, if the unit is primarily NF land and it is still closed, there's no point in keeping the tag.
But what if you drew a lick creek archery tag which the unit is going be like 90% burned and still might not be able to get in there still by September. Now muzzleloader and rifle might be different. Elk will be in there somewhere.Sent from my SM-G935V using Tapatalk
Quote from: emac on July 15, 2021, 04:05:48 PMBut what if you drew a lick creek archery tag which the unit is going be like 90% burned and still might not be able to get in there still by September. Now muzzleloader and rifle might be different. Elk will be in there somewhere.Sent from my SM-G935V using TapatalkEmac, Something to think about. Back in 2006 we drew 5 of the 13 quality bull tags in the Dayton area. That was the year that Dayton had their terrible fire that destroyed most of the unit. We didn't know what to do. The area we new well was where the fire had burned the most and much of it was blackened and looked like hell! We hunted the first 3-4 days over on Chase MT where the burn wasn't as bad. By Thursday we still hadn't filled any of our tags. I talked to the Biologist for the unit and he told us to not to disregard the burn area so on Thursday we went over to where we used to hunt and we killed four bulls in that years burnt area. They were right in the worst part of the burn and I was amazed to see them there. Even after the area has been burned, there are areas within the burn that are oasis's that didn't get burned to bad. My brother shot a 7x8 398 inch bull laying in what looked like Mars it was blackened so bad. Ill try to dig up a picture for you if I can. Just try to make the best of it is my advice.