Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Curly on November 16, 2010, 12:16:23 PMHopefully WDFW is one of the agencies taking furlough days.WDFW does participate in the furlough days.
Hopefully WDFW is one of the agencies taking furlough days.
my paycheck didn't go up, I just have to tighten my budget and live within my means, so the game dept. should do the same. They can take their increases and shove them in their.........
So in 15 years your paycheck hasn't gone up??? Because the last significant increase in licenses was about 15 years ago.
I agree these prices will 1. Increase poaching, a lot... Most good old boys will turn their head.
Here's a table showing 2000 prices compared to 2010 prices, with the CPI also listed for reference.[smg id=10045]
It would be interesting if you were to list all of the purchases you made for hunting season (ammo, gas, food, gear, butcher, etc) and see how that compares to your license. I am willing to bet the license would make up maybe 25% of your total spending.
Quote from: bigtex on November 23, 2010, 10:26:29 PMIt would be interesting if you were to list all of the purchases you made for hunting season (ammo, gas, food, gear, butcher, etc) and see how that compares to your license. I am willing to bet the license would make up maybe 25% of your total spending.25%? No way, that is way too high. For me it would be somewhere between 1% and 5%. I spend money on gas and other things related to hunting all year 'round. The license fee is a very, very small part of the total cost. Actually if you include the cost of a truck, and RV, rifles, optics, etc.-- even the 1% to 5% guess might be too high. If I didn't hunt, I wouldn't have spent $40,000 on a truck and I probably would not have spent $10,000 on an RV. Spending around $100 for a hunting license and all the tags for a year's hunting is nothing.