Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: CarbonHunter on March 25, 2025, 09:21:37 AMQuote from: bigmacc on March 23, 2025, 04:55:49 PMQuote from: CarbonHunter on March 23, 2025, 12:49:12 PMI forgot about the salt on the roads attracting them to the death lanes. That is something else that wasn’t there 50-70 years ago when the numbers were so high.And let’s not forget what else wasn’t there 50-70 years ago, an exploding population of cats and bears and the darling of them, all as far as WDFW is concerned ever growing packs of wolves. Everyone knows one cat kills around 50 deer per year, now multiple that by hundreds of cats possibly in that valley(no one really knows)and that’s a hell of a loss every year and that’s not counting what the increasing population of bears have done to the fawn crop over the last 20 years and yes, now throw in wolves, add all those losses together over the last 20-30 years and there’s the number 1 reason this herd has tanked and can’t fight their way back. My opinion.Predators and prey will self regulate over time. If you go back 200 years ago before the area was settled there was cats, wolves, wolverines, black and grizzly bears and there was far more wildlife than there has ever been since settlement occurred. Yellowstone is a good example of this, it took 30 years after wolves were reintroduced but it’s finally taking shape. There is one new factor that wasn’t there 200 years ago and that is domestic animals that the predators can feed on when the prey numbers are low and that is why hunting needs to be a tool used to manage predators. Not that the libs will ever understand that though.Habitat encroachment, roads everywhere, uncrossable manmade barriers, rural development and recreational pressure all work in favor of predators and put the ungulates at a disadvantage. The anti-hunting argument of "leave them alone and they'll naturally self-regulate over time" doesn't hold water, as the modern landscape isn't natural. One could argue since humans have affected their habitat so greatly it is now our duty to manage predators.
Quote from: bigmacc on March 23, 2025, 04:55:49 PMQuote from: CarbonHunter on March 23, 2025, 12:49:12 PMI forgot about the salt on the roads attracting them to the death lanes. That is something else that wasn’t there 50-70 years ago when the numbers were so high.And let’s not forget what else wasn’t there 50-70 years ago, an exploding population of cats and bears and the darling of them, all as far as WDFW is concerned ever growing packs of wolves. Everyone knows one cat kills around 50 deer per year, now multiple that by hundreds of cats possibly in that valley(no one really knows)and that’s a hell of a loss every year and that’s not counting what the increasing population of bears have done to the fawn crop over the last 20 years and yes, now throw in wolves, add all those losses together over the last 20-30 years and there’s the number 1 reason this herd has tanked and can’t fight their way back. My opinion.Predators and prey will self regulate over time. If you go back 200 years ago before the area was settled there was cats, wolves, wolverines, black and grizzly bears and there was far more wildlife than there has ever been since settlement occurred. Yellowstone is a good example of this, it took 30 years after wolves were reintroduced but it’s finally taking shape. There is one new factor that wasn’t there 200 years ago and that is domestic animals that the predators can feed on when the prey numbers are low and that is why hunting needs to be a tool used to manage predators. Not that the libs will ever understand that though.
Quote from: CarbonHunter on March 23, 2025, 12:49:12 PMI forgot about the salt on the roads attracting them to the death lanes. That is something else that wasn’t there 50-70 years ago when the numbers were so high.And let’s not forget what else wasn’t there 50-70 years ago, an exploding population of cats and bears and the darling of them, all as far as WDFW is concerned ever growing packs of wolves. Everyone knows one cat kills around 50 deer per year, now multiple that by hundreds of cats possibly in that valley(no one really knows)and that’s a hell of a loss every year and that’s not counting what the increasing population of bears have done to the fawn crop over the last 20 years and yes, now throw in wolves, add all those losses together over the last 20-30 years and there’s the number 1 reason this herd has tanked and can’t fight their way back. My opinion.
I forgot about the salt on the roads attracting them to the death lanes. That is something else that wasn’t there 50-70 years ago when the numbers were so high.
Whats sad is now if people see a herd of 20 deer in a field they run to Huntwa and report all is well, glory days are back. What they are clueless about is that field used to have 350 in it, and the field next to it, and the field next to that one. No exaggeration, I'd go shed hunting and count literally a thousand deer in a basin. Now there might be 5. I'm not even that frickin' old. I used to go hunt before I had to ride my bike into work. I'd look over more than 250deer in a morning on the ridge outside of town on public land during hunting season. I would count more deer in less than an hour than Fitkin counted this year in three days on prime winter range. Just looking at trails and tracks. Its crazy how a snow covered ridge used to be crisscrossed with game trails, now just snow
There was a study of collared deer in the Methow valley showing a majority of those deer had moved to the orchards around Chelan. It doesn't take rocket science to figure out predators forced them out.
I wonder what effect the absence of logging on the National Forest has had on deer populations over the last thirty years or so. I think that mid elevation logging units provided a lot of spring, summer and fall forage that isn't available any longer. Combine that with large ag operations that are now small plots with homes, cabins and dogs, outdoor recreation 24/7/365 and the modern approach to predator management and it's easier for me to understand why things have changed. Maybe without logging, agriculture and predator eradication there never would have been the giant herds the 1960s and 70s that we all wish were here today.
Quote from: Twispriver on March 27, 2025, 02:29:47 PMI wonder what effect the absence of logging on the National Forest has had on deer populations over the last thirty years or so. I think that mid elevation logging units provided a lot of spring, summer and fall forage that isn't available any longer. Combine that with large ag operations that are now small plots with homes, cabins and dogs, outdoor recreation 24/7/365 and the modern approach to predator management and it's easier for me to understand why things have changed. Maybe without logging, agriculture and predator eradication there never would have been the giant herds the 1960s and 70s that we all wish were here today. summer range is AS important or more important than winter range. Fire suppression as well as lack of logging has been extremely detriment to mule deer.
Quote from: Karl Blanchard on March 27, 2025, 02:39:07 PMQuote from: Twispriver on March 27, 2025, 02:29:47 PMI wonder what effect the absence of logging on the National Forest has had on deer populations over the last thirty years or so. I think that mid elevation logging units provided a lot of spring, summer and fall forage that isn't available any longer. Combine that with large ag operations that are now small plots with homes, cabins and dogs, outdoor recreation 24/7/365 and the modern approach to predator management and it's easier for me to understand why things have changed. Maybe without logging, agriculture and predator eradication there never would have been the giant herds the 1960s and 70s that we all wish were here today. summer range is AS important or more important than winter range. Fire suppression as well as lack of logging has been extremely detriment to mule deer.This is where I struggle. I get ya on the fire suppression, but at the same time they are letting fires burn up a ton of country. MD are surely adapt at avoiding some fires, but when they get big (fires) it's gotta be hard to outrun a blaze. Think Pioneer, Duncan, Wolverine, Tyee, Cougar, Thirtymile, Carlton, Okanogan, black canyon, retreat, Tripod, domke, etc etc............ We have burned up alot of deer, and at the same time habitat...,..which allows for more harvest due to visibility.
Quote from: NOCK NOCK on March 27, 2025, 05:21:40 PMQuote from: Karl Blanchard on March 27, 2025, 02:39:07 PMQuote from: Twispriver on March 27, 2025, 02:29:47 PMI wonder what effect the absence of logging on the National Forest has had on deer populations over the last thirty years or so. I think that mid elevation logging units provided a lot of spring, summer and fall forage that isn't available any longer. Combine that with large ag operations that are now small plots with homes, cabins and dogs, outdoor recreation 24/7/365 and the modern approach to predator management and it's easier for me to understand why things have changed. Maybe without logging, agriculture and predator eradication there never would have been the giant herds the 1960s and 70s that we all wish were here today. summer range is AS important or more important than winter range. Fire suppression as well as lack of logging has been extremely detriment to mule deer.This is where I struggle. I get ya on the fire suppression, but at the same time they are letting fires burn up a ton of country. MD are surely adapt at avoiding some fires, but when they get big (fires) it's gotta be hard to outrun a blaze. Think Pioneer, Duncan, Wolverine, Tyee, Cougar, Thirtymile, Carlton, Okanogan, black canyon, retreat, Tripod, domke, etc etc............ We have burned up alot of deer, and at the same time habitat...,..which allows for more harvest due to visibility. All those mega fires are due to humans mismanaging our forests for the last 100 years. Mother natures design wasn't meant to have that kind of fuel load on the landscape. Instead of stuff burning every now and then and improving habitat, we put out every spark for decades then when it does go up it's scorched earth and can't support anything.
The USFS has been running up the cost of these mega fires i.e. complex and last years Pioneer fire by doing things that aren't even close to the fire zone. If your going to brush back roads, dump gravel on those areas not close to the fire it shouldn't be charged to it. Then to build fire breaks in case the fire gets that big don't go back in and tear it up afterwards. Leave it for future usage. All this adds to the fire cost.