Free: Contests & Raffles.
My Dads a wheat farmer, at harvest time the turkeys have eaten 30 to 40 ft edge around his fields. Every head of wheat gone, that's money out of his pocket. As far as Oat hay vs barley hay, go tell a beef rancher that and see what kind of answer you get. I'm not trying to bust anybody out on this but it's not that ez.
PABEN is correct in saying it is a difficult situation-It's been a problem with all wildlife for the over 50 years I've been hunting. I believe that farming and ranching is a damn tough way to scratch out a living and landowners should be compensated for wildlife damage or reimbursed for enhancing wildlife habitat. My only catch to that, is that they must allow some public hunting to receive it. I know several large landowners who complain about wildlife losses as they stand behind their NO TRESPASSING sign. Hunting is, as we all know, one of the wildlife management tools and to ask to be compensated with no public hunting is asking for a meal without paying. I'm not advocating throwing your property open to any and all comers, but at least some limited accsess is a must before any compensation should be handed out.
While ys it is somewhat small in scale and it's not just planting Oaks, while I don't know all by name or can remember the Oak hybrid we look at are doing fine in place in Spokane right now and being a hybrid they have half the growth time of a normal Oak. But it's not just Oak, choke cherry and other winter mast and fruit bearing shrubs are being implementd along with cover foilage and with that granted it takes some time but the process isn't just planting. Effective uses of various hazing to get the Turkeys to use those areas rather than the feed lot are being practiced.While again it's on a small scale......Oak grows from an Acorn. Starting small is al least starting. And may be more than a feel good, it can show landowners that we are serious about helping them while helping turkeys and that we're willing to do more than just beg to hunt their land. We can't get big scale with out starting somewhere and can't get started at all from the sidelines
I really appreciate both your opinions and havesome understanding of both of your pasts in the NWTF and Appauld both your sacrifices and knowledge on this area, again I'm no biologist and not nearly as affluent with Turkeys as both of you. As far as the things both of you brought up here, may already be being said by our Bio, I may have forgotten parts....A.D.D.. I do leave the " Heavy thinking" to those who have that knowledge while my contribution is more the heavy lifting part and trying to help get more involvment whether it from the NWTF side ( which I think you guys know from past threads I'm on the Side of the Turkey and not any one group) But if we can get more folks knowledgable and involved maybe we can make a difference with the WDFW....If we don't all will be lost because as you two are well aware of it's like But sooner or later we'll knock a brick or two loose. Yelp and Wacent I do truly value both your opinions and am not taking any offense to these threads, I think the way we have had these in the past while may be rehashing some things, are positive. I fear if we( The People) Not just the NWTF don't keep vigilant on this the WDFW would let the turkeys go by the way side. And while I am now complete and udder Turkeynut....I also see it in my Daughter 8, and that's where my drive to help these birds lie. And I'm open to any suggstions as to what to do. As far as the NWTF is concerned I wonder how much of paying the landowners to grow crops directly for the turkeys would cost us annually. It may have to be a route we persue, case by case basis. I do agree that all animals are going to go after the easy food everytime, it's nature, but I think hazing and if we could get some hunters, albeit youth or not would help greatly. But let's keep the dialogue going I'm learnig and that's what I get on these forums for is to learn and meet new folks.Thanks Travis