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Author Topic: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears  (Read 32960 times)

Offline actionshooter

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #60 on: December 20, 2023, 06:50:28 PM »
Honest question.

How much of the commission accepting the petition is about avoiding litigation from WWF?
Some of the commissioners are working directly with the anti's... this is a plan being executed.

Offline Katmai Guy

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #61 on: December 20, 2023, 08:41:29 PM »
Any chance to Get Jesse or Suzanna Frame to get it on the TV in front of more non hunters, not antis?  Just wonder'n.
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Offline hughjorgan

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #62 on: December 20, 2023, 08:43:22 PM »
I wouldn’t be surprised if we have a cougar hunting ban initiative with in the next year. Here is the link to the letter by the supposedly 50 “expert” carnivore biologists; one of which was Fred Koontz. 

https://wawildlifefirst.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/Statement-of-50-Carnivore-Ecologists-re-Cougar-and-Bear-Science-1.pdf

”Cougars DO NOT require hunting to regulate their populations”  :rolleyes:

Offline Slamadoo

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #63 on: December 20, 2023, 10:25:51 PM »
I'm aware that some of the commissioners are working in unison with the anti-hunting groups. But this last vote was 7-2. Are 7 of them working with the antis or are some of those 7 operating out of an effort to avoid litigation?

If the commission declines that petition. They probably get sued.

Offline Skyvalhunter

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #64 on: December 21, 2023, 05:28:31 AM »
The WDFW has already been in a exercise to study the Cougar/bear issue. The commission didnt agree to roll back to 2018 regulations for these predators. They merely said yes to the petition in part so that the WDFW could continue their exercise. to say what changes if any will be made to the seasons has yet to be determined and voted upon.
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Offline harveymarv

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #65 on: December 21, 2023, 05:49:46 AM »
my understanding is that the next step is a cr102 for rule making based on the approved petition with opportunity for public comment?


The WDFW has already been in a exercise to study the Cougar/bear issue. The commission didnt agree to roll back to 2018 regulations for these predators. They merely said yes to the petition in part so that the WDFW could continue their exercise. to say what changes if any will be made to the seasons has yet to be determined and voted upon.

Offline Skyvalhunter

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #66 on: December 21, 2023, 08:07:09 AM »
If you listened to the meeting the commissioners said a roll back to 2018 was not approved.
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Offline fireweed

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #67 on: December 21, 2023, 08:17:48 AM »
There is a huge new cougar study in the works on the Olympic Peninsula.  It is spearheaded by the tribes and a non-profit big cat focused group called Panthera.  Because the tribes want to hunt elk and deer, too, their information in the end may be more balanced.  They are following 40 or so collared cougars all around, even one crossed I-5. Then they are collecting cougar poop for DNA to see who they are and what they eat.  The highest mortality of the collared cougars so far isn't hunting, but depredation (cougar killed for eating llamas, chickens, goats etc). The good news is that young cougars like to eat opossums.

Offline hughjorgan

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #68 on: December 21, 2023, 08:46:24 AM »
If you listened to the meeting the commissioners said a roll back to 2018 was not approved.

And you believe them? The antis end goal is clear as day in their letter and we have commissioners that are on their side…

Offline Skyvalhunter

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #69 on: December 21, 2023, 09:15:04 AM »
There is a huge new cougar study in the works on the Olympic Peninsula.  It is spearheaded by the tribes and a non-profit big cat focused group called Panthera.  Because the tribes want to hunt elk and deer, too, their information in the end may be more balanced.  They are following 40 or so collared cougars all around, even one crossed I-5. Then they are collecting cougar poop for DNA to see who they are and what they eat.  The highest mortality of the collared cougars so far isn't hunting, but depredation (cougar killed for eating llamas, chickens, goats etc). The good news is that young cougars like to eat opossums.

A part of that which is concerning is if there is a depredation killing (I have heard some pretty large numbers thrown out there) done by WDFW that petition wants those numbers to be counted in the GMU quota. Weather or not that is agreed upon might be a bit concerning.
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Offline ducks4days

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #70 on: December 21, 2023, 09:34:44 AM »
There is a huge new cougar study in the works on the Olympic Peninsula.  It is spearheaded by the tribes and a non-profit big cat focused group called Panthera.  Because the tribes want to hunt elk and deer, too, their information in the end may be more balanced.  They are following 40 or so collared cougars all around, even one crossed I-5. Then they are collecting cougar poop for DNA to see who they are and what they eat.  The highest mortality of the collared cougars so far isn't hunting, but depredation (cougar killed for eating llamas, chickens, goats etc). The good news is that young cougars like to eat opossums.

A part of that which is concerning is if there is a depredation killing (I have heard some pretty large numbers thrown out there) done by WDFW that petition wants those numbers to be counted in the GMU quota. Weather or not that is agreed upon might be a bit concerning.

If there is a depradation killing, it is direct evidence that the quota should be increased
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Offline fireweed

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #71 on: December 21, 2023, 10:38:41 AM »
There is a huge new cougar study in the works on the Olympic Peninsula.  It is spearheaded by the tribes and a non-profit big cat focused group called Panthera.  Because the tribes want to hunt elk and deer, too, their information in the end may be more balanced.  They are following 40 or so collared cougars all around, even one crossed I-5. Then they are collecting cougar poop for DNA to see who they are and what they eat.  The highest mortality of the collared cougars so far isn't hunting, but depredation (cougar killed for eating llamas, chickens, goats etc). The good news is that young cougars like to eat opossums.

A part of that which is concerning is if there is a depredation killing (I have heard some pretty large numbers thrown out there) done by WDFW that petition wants those numbers to be counted in the GMU quota. Weather or not that is agreed upon might be a bit concerning.

If there is a depradation killing, it is direct evidence that the quota should be increased


If you read that letter link, they argue the opposite--saying more depredation is due to killing cougars and if you don't kill them, the depredation goes down.  And they are "scientists", so it must be true! Their logic is this: you kill the big tom in the area, and all the young dispersing toms move in and they eat the livestock.  Therefore if you don't kill the big old tom, the little ones stay away from his territory and keep them from killing livestock.  But, they never say where the dispersing young cats go then....Do they just starve? Let themselves be killed by the big tom?  Also, on the cougar project in the Olympics, one of their star old big mature tom was shot for killing a llama.  Ooops.

Offline hunter399

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #72 on: December 21, 2023, 10:40:32 AM »
There is a huge new cougar study in the works on the Olympic Peninsula.  It is spearheaded by the tribes and a non-profit big cat focused group called Panthera.  Because the tribes want to hunt elk and deer, too, their information in the end may be more balanced.  They are following 40 or so collared cougars all around, even one crossed I-5. Then they are collecting cougar poop for DNA to see who they are and what they eat.  The highest mortality of the collared cougars so far isn't hunting, but depredation (cougar killed for eating llamas, chickens, goats etc). The good news is that young cougars like to eat opossums.

A part of that which is concerning is if there is a depredation killing (I have heard some pretty large numbers thrown out there) done by WDFW that petition wants those numbers to be counted in the GMU quota. Weather or not that is agreed upon might be a bit concerning.

If there is a depradation killing, it is direct evidence that the quota should be increased
Not sure if it may help.
I've been looking at Idaho's cougar management plan and studys.
One problem is ,they are able to target males,with hounds.
There plan also shows harvest rates and some other good information. Idaho statewide harvest is 500 -700 cougars a year.

Any study's or research that can support us. That cougars do need to be managed is worth a shot.

https://idfg.idaho.gov/form/mountain-lion-management-plan


Might be able to find some good info in, Montana or Oregon cougar management plans as well. Another plus to looking at other states management plan is , climate change and other stuff is about the same. Washington climate change is no different then Idaho or Oregon. So you can't pull the climate change card.

If you ask me. I would look at harvest rates for similar states.
Compare to Washington.
Here is 2022 cougar harvest. Looks to be only half of Idaho's harvest. Yet all there research says they still have a sustainable population. See where I'm going with it.
« Last Edit: December 21, 2023, 11:14:41 AM by hunter399 »

Offline slavenoid

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #73 on: December 21, 2023, 02:57:58 PM »
Just look at California, they're still killing cougars. These same groups are continuing the fight to end all cougar deaths. They just collect more money and shift the target. According to their websites now the targets are roads and depredation permits. We're supposed to believe they're just concerned about bag limits. Right...

Offline ducks4days

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Re: WFWD Report on Courgars and Bears
« Reply #74 on: December 21, 2023, 03:23:02 PM »
Just look at California, they're still killing cougars. These same groups are continuing the fight to end all cougar deaths. They just collect more money and shift the target. According to their websites now the targets are roads and depredation permits. We're supposed to believe they're just concerned about bag limits. Right...

California is actually killing twice as many cougars now as they were before the hunting ban went into effect.
What country can preserve it's liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon & pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots & tyrants.

 


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