Free: Contests & Raffles.
How in gods green earth do they think the goose prairie archery hunting gmu can only handle 2 archery bulls to be taken. Do the bios even do anything or are they still blaming covid? I do believe they have caught the stupid.
Where have you all been? I have been talking the Yakima permit decline for the past 5 years. It isn’t just this year. Archery could get 50 permits easy for most of the units. The biologists have stated the herd size is larger now than it was when they were giving north of a 100.I would like a 1v1 for 4 hours with the department and hear how they have arrived at the permit levels for quality elk in the Yakima units for all weapon types. I don’t think it is based on science but rather politics at this point.Let’s keep emailing them, calling them and posting here (little value but at least it gets the word out) and maybe they finally pull their head out. Maybe…Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Yes I see that, I do believe the department of fish and wildlife hates the entire muzzleloader season.
Quote from: dreamingbig on April 16, 2025, 05:41:00 AMWhere have you all been? I have been talking the Yakima permit decline for the past 5 years. It isn’t just this year. Archery could get 50 permits easy for most of the units. The biologists have stated the herd size is larger now than it was when they were giving north of a 100.I would like a 1v1 for 4 hours with the department and hear how they have arrived at the permit levels for quality elk in the Yakima units for all weapon types. I don’t think it is based on science but rather politics at this point.Let’s keep emailing them, calling them and posting here (little value but at least it gets the word out) and maybe they finally pull their head out. Maybe…Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkThe reason for the reduction in quality tags about 5 years ago was because they saw a 50% reduction in mature bulls in the herd in one year. Poaching? Tribal hunting? I never saw if they actually figured out why. So even though the herd is healthy and that is why you are seeing hundreds of cow tags again I haven’t seen numbers to suggest the mature bulls numbers have recovered.
Quote from: CarbonHunter on April 16, 2025, 06:42:12 AMQuote from: dreamingbig on April 16, 2025, 05:41:00 AMWhere have you all been? I have been talking the Yakima permit decline for the past 5 years. It isn’t just this year. Archery could get 50 permits easy for most of the units. The biologists have stated the herd size is larger now than it was when they were giving north of a 100.I would like a 1v1 for 4 hours with the department and hear how they have arrived at the permit levels for quality elk in the Yakima units for all weapon types. I don’t think it is based on science but rather politics at this point.Let’s keep emailing them, calling them and posting here (little value but at least it gets the word out) and maybe they finally pull their head out. Maybe…Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkThe reason for the reduction in quality tags about 5 years ago was because they saw a 50% reduction in mature bulls in the herd in one year. Poaching? Tribal hunting? I never saw if they actually figured out why. So even though the herd is healthy and that is why you are seeing hundreds of cow tags again I haven’t seen numbers to suggest the mature bulls numbers have recovered.Trail cameras would suggest there are more than enough.That survey was done on a low snow year with all the bulls back up high already. Duh.50 archery elk permits is not hundreds but maybe you were adding all user groups together.I will say one benefit of turning these units into OIL permits is that the age class is WAY up. I have seen the evidence.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: dreamingbig on April 16, 2025, 07:31:22 AMQuote from: CarbonHunter on April 16, 2025, 06:42:12 AMQuote from: dreamingbig on April 16, 2025, 05:41:00 AMWhere have you all been? I have been talking the Yakima permit decline for the past 5 years. It isn’t just this year. Archery could get 50 permits easy for most of the units. The biologists have stated the herd size is larger now than it was when they were giving north of a 100.I would like a 1v1 for 4 hours with the department and hear how they have arrived at the permit levels for quality elk in the Yakima units for all weapon types. I don’t think it is based on science but rather politics at this point.Let’s keep emailing them, calling them and posting here (little value but at least it gets the word out) and maybe they finally pull their head out. Maybe…Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkThe reason for the reduction in quality tags about 5 years ago was because they saw a 50% reduction in mature bulls in the herd in one year. Poaching? Tribal hunting? I never saw if they actually figured out why. So even though the herd is healthy and that is why you are seeing hundreds of cow tags again I haven’t seen numbers to suggest the mature bulls numbers have recovered.Trail cameras would suggest there are more than enough.That survey was done on a low snow year with all the bulls back up high already. Duh.50 archery elk permits is not hundreds but maybe you were adding all user groups together.I will say one benefit of turning these units into OIL permits is that the age class is WAY up. I have seen the evidence.Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkYes talking all weapons. There are 250 rifle 346 cow tags and the most I ever remember was 400 from years ago. The archery cow season should just be opened back up given the numbers because if I remember right the harvest numbers for umtanum was around 60 cows each year when it was open season for archery. You can also see the decline in archery hunting for the Yakima area since they removed the open cow season. That is also affecting how many tags are available to archery hunters. Keep in mind that the mature bulls numbers dropped from around 800 to 400 in one year. If the poaching or tribal hunting is still occurring at that rate it will take a long time to get back to a number near 8% of the herd being mature bulls. The bios are being pretty quiet about the situation with mature bulls.
Quote from: CarbonHunter on April 16, 2025, 08:35:14 AMQuote from: dreamingbig on April 16, 2025, 07:31:22 AMQuote from: CarbonHunter on April 16, 2025, 06:42:12 AMQuote from: dreamingbig on April 16, 2025, 05:41:00 AMWhere have you all been? I have been talking the Yakima permit decline for the past 5 years. It isn’t just this year. Archery could get 50 permits easy for most of the units. The biologists have stated the herd size is larger now than it was when they were giving north of a 100.I would like a 1v1 for 4 hours with the department and hear how they have arrived at the permit levels for quality elk in the Yakima units for all weapon types. I don’t think it is based on science but rather politics at this point.Let’s keep emailing them, calling them and posting here (little value but at least it gets the word out) and maybe they finally pull their head out. Maybe…Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkThe reason for the reduction in quality tags about 5 years ago was because they saw a 50% reduction in mature bulls in the herd in one year. Poaching? Tribal hunting? I never saw if they actually figured out why. So even though the herd is healthy and that is why you are seeing hundreds of cow tags again I haven’t seen numbers to suggest the mature bulls numbers have recovered.Trail cameras would suggest there are more than enough.That survey was done on a low snow year with all the bulls back up high already. Duh.50 archery elk permits is not hundreds but maybe you were adding all user groups together.I will say one benefit of turning these units into OIL permits is that the age class is WAY up. I have seen the evidence.Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkYes talking all weapons. There are 250 rifle 346 cow tags and the most I ever remember was 400 from years ago. The archery cow season should just be opened back up given the numbers because if I remember right the harvest numbers for umtanum was around 60 cows each year when it was open season for archery. You can also see the decline in archery hunting for the Yakima area since they removed the open cow season. That is also affecting how many tags are available to archery hunters. Keep in mind that the mature bulls numbers dropped from around 800 to 400 in one year. If the poaching or tribal hunting is still occurring at that rate it will take a long time to get back to a number near 8% of the herd being mature bulls. The bios are being pretty quiet about the situation with mature bulls.Where are you finding the data on mature bulls?
The permit numbers are an absolute insult and completely unwarranted imo. Hell they didn't even count elk during covid but continued with this silliness. Count the feed lots and call it good. Nevermind the hundreds of bulls that don't come down at all Remember too folks, they gave out additional tags last year due to their draw screw up. Those chickens were most certainly going to come home to roost and they did. There is no free lunch.