Free: Contests & Raffles.
I'm a native american from the westside and I've had the opportunity to work for my tribes wildlife management dept as well as assisting some of the other tribes and WDFW with big game projects.
Understandable to those who wouldn't hunt like I do...but like I said, i only really trophy hunt for myself, the animals i harvest for others I wouldn't necessarily consider trophy animals...just opportunistically.Lowe,We are issued tags...only one at a time, unless using the DH tag, then we can have at most 2 tags on our person. We report our harvest to the Northwest Indian Fisheries commission along with the other tribes around here, they total it by GMU and share it with the state (without disclosing which tribes are harvesting in which GMU though, i think that has to do with bad blood between the state/tribes...we don't want the state to find out we're not actually harvesting animals in a certain GMU for fear they will play the "if you don't use it you lose it" card). We also have annual WDFW/Tribal technical meetings where we discuss research projects and who has the funding to cover population monitoring in certain GMU's.
Coastal NativeMaybe you can help me understand something I have always wanted an answer to.I have always been lead to believe Native Americans are spiritual and in touch with the heart beat of mother earth and all her wonderful animals. That they only took what they needed to survive. Never killed in vain and would only take a proud, prestigious, trophy animal in a fashion that showed GREAT respect to that animal. That the "style" of the hunt and the death of said animal would be spiritual and have great meaning.My question is this. If native american indians wish to lay claim to ANY of these animals for the sake of "Culture" why aren't any of you hunting these animals in a "Cultural" manner that is "Native" to your people? Because all I ever see is modern times machinery and weaponry and it appears, atleast to me, these animals are being taken simply because you can. There, IMO, seems to be nothing "spiritual" about it.Not trying to ruffle your feathers, no pun intended, but I would truely like to understand this much better than I obviously do.