Free: Contests & Raffles.
The numbers above just prove the State isn't managing for our opportunity.According to the State bios the Yakima herd is above objective, bull to cow ratio is at the high end of objective, which should both lead to increased opportunities... according to the State..So where's the opportunities.....A few cow tags.....? ...This isn't even taking into consideration my observations that the herd is better off and the bull to cow ratio is higher than the States claims....
Quote from: fishngamereaper on April 23, 2025, 03:28:43 PMThe numbers above just prove the State isn't managing for our opportunity.According to the State bios the Yakima herd is above objective, bull to cow ratio is at the high end of objective, which should both lead to increased opportunities... according to the State..So where's the opportunities.....A few cow tags.....? ...This isn't even taking into consideration my observations that the herd is better off and the bull to cow ratio is higher than the States claims.... Seems to me that the state is not managing for hunting opportunity...only opportunity for more predator food.
Quote from: fishngamereaper on April 23, 2025, 03:28:43 PMThe numbers above just prove the State isn't managing for our opportunity.According to the State bios the Yakima herd is above objective, bull to cow ratio is at the high end of objective, which should both lead to increased opportunities... according to the State..So where's the opportunities.....A few cow tags.....? ...This isn't even taking into consideration my observations that the herd is better off and the bull to cow ratio is higher than the States claims.... What are you talking about? The bull to cow ratio is at the bottom end of the objective not the top. The numbers at the bottom of the graph are years and it’s not 2017. The herd is over objectives but I personally feel the area can support far more elk than the 10k they are managing for. That is why the cow tags are high and the bull tags are low. I didn’t count the elk this winter but given you feel 13 bulls to 100 cows is above objectives I’m going to side with the state this time.
Quote from: CarbonHunter on April 23, 2025, 05:51:55 PMQuote from: fishngamereaper on April 23, 2025, 03:28:43 PMThe numbers above just prove the State isn't managing for our opportunity.According to the State bios the Yakima herd is above objective, bull to cow ratio is at the high end of objective, which should both lead to increased opportunities... according to the State..So where's the opportunities.....A few cow tags.....? ...This isn't even taking into consideration my observations that the herd is better off and the bull to cow ratio is higher than the States claims.... What are you talking about? The bull to cow ratio is at the bottom end of the objective not the top. The numbers at the bottom of the graph are years and it’s not 2017. The herd is over objectives but I personally feel the area can support far more elk than the 10k they are managing for. That is why the cow tags are high and the bull tags are low. I didn’t count the elk this winter but given you feel 13 bulls to 100 cows is above objectives I’m going to side with the state this time.Their objective is 12...so 13 is higher than objective. Obviously not super high but high enough to allow with confidence more tag allotment...that's how their numbers work..why less tags this year than 18,19,20,21....all under objective years..They claimed 20 in 2017...ok...( a number that is directly related to the great cow kill off when they issued thousand's of cow tags) ..The last couple years I'm seeing WAY more bulls than 2017...so I'll defer to my experience over the states feed lot surveys...Guess at the end of the day we get whatever they want to give us...and based on factual numbers ...that number could very well be zero in a couple years.
Quote from: fishngamereaper on April 23, 2025, 06:47:17 PMQuote from: CarbonHunter on April 23, 2025, 05:51:55 PMQuote from: fishngamereaper on April 23, 2025, 03:28:43 PMThe numbers above just prove the State isn't managing for our opportunity.According to the State bios the Yakima herd is above objective, bull to cow ratio is at the high end of objective, which should both lead to increased opportunities... according to the State..So where's the opportunities.....A few cow tags.....? ...This isn't even taking into consideration my observations that the herd is better off and the bull to cow ratio is higher than the States claims.... What are you talking about? The bull to cow ratio is at the bottom end of the objective not the top. The numbers at the bottom of the graph are years and it’s not 2017. The herd is over objectives but I personally feel the area can support far more elk than the 10k they are managing for. That is why the cow tags are high and the bull tags are low. I didn’t count the elk this winter but given you feel 13 bulls to 100 cows is above objectives I’m going to side with the state this time.Their objective is 12...so 13 is higher than objective. Obviously not super high but high enough to allow with confidence more tag allotment...that's how their numbers work..why less tags this year than 18,19,20,21....all under objective years..They claimed 20 in 2017...ok...( a number that is directly related to the great cow kill off when they issued thousand's of cow tags) ..The last couple years I'm seeing WAY more bulls than 2017...so I'll defer to my experience over the states feed lot surveys...Guess at the end of the day we get whatever they want to give us...and based on factual numbers ...that number could very well be zero in a couple years.13 bulls per 100 cows is an extremely weak number for a healthy herd. The fact that Washington wants to manage their largest herd to a maximum of 20 bulls to 100 cows shows how much they hate elk. Typically biologists who know how to manage elk manage a herd to 20-30 bulls per 100 cows post hunting season. For trophy units they will manage to 30-40 bulls per 100 cows post hunting season. How many bull tags do you think they should issue for this herd? Currently they are managing this herd to a post hunting season total of 1,300-1,400 bulls. If this was a trophy state there would not be a hunting season for bulls with such a low bull to cow ratio.
Elk HATER!