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In my opinion, we can't have ENOUGH wilderness. It is totally beyond me how any hunter could be upset at the preservation of more wildlife habitat. I support almost any organization with the stated goal of habitat conservation. And by the way, the Nature Conservancy is definitely not anti-hunting, even if not every single thing they do is designed to open up more hunting territory. They have had multiple partnerships with REMF and DU, and if you think those groups are anti-hunting, you may have gone a bit too conspiracy-theory to be reasoned with... not trying to bash anyone, I'm just saying it weighs on us as hunters to be cognizant of the fact that preservation of wildlife ultimately relies on habitat conservation, and there are instances where compromises make sense. Reducing human intrusion to an area by making it a wilderness is NOT an inherently anti-hunting move.
Quote from: npaull on November 18, 2009, 07:43:08 PMIn my opinion, we can't have ENOUGH wilderness. It is totally beyond me how any hunter could be upset at the preservation of more wildlife habitat. I support almost any organization with the stated goal of habitat conservation. And by the way, the Nature Conservancy is definitely not anti-hunting, even if not every single thing they do is designed to open up more hunting territory. They have had multiple partnerships with REMF and DU, and if you think those groups are anti-hunting, you may have gone a bit too conspiracy-theory to be reasoned with... not trying to bash anyone, I'm just saying it weighs on us as hunters to be cognizant of the fact that preservation of wildlife ultimately relies on habitat conservation, and there are instances where compromises make sense. Reducing human intrusion to an area by making it a wilderness is NOT an inherently anti-hunting move.just because an area is wilderness does not mean it holds more animals. I guarentee you there are more deer and elk per mile in the area near the pendorille river then 20 miles away in the salmo priest wilderness. often we forget how important logging is to hunting......logging and wilderness don't mix. we do a lot of thinning over here on the east side and it is great for bucks and bulls.....tough to hunt, but great cover.keep in mind the impact on the economy if an area is designated......all that trickles down.I did nt want to say it, but if you want to save elk, hunt indians.