Free: Contests & Raffles.
In his blacktail book Scott Haugen said DHLS was responsible for 80-90% decline in some blacktail populations. Unfortunately he left out the fact that predator populations were already on the rise around the time that DHLS started to hit the blacktail populations.
Just how has this thread grown to two pages without one mention of wolves?
Quote from: Bean Counter on December 06, 2010, 11:25:00 AMJust how has this thread grown to two pages without one mention of wolves? Mainly because wolves are a nonfactor in most of WA. Maybe in the future but not now. Western WA has the potential to produce a lot of black tails and it doesn't. We can't blame wolves for that. They aren't here, at least except for a rare wanderer.The hair loss syndrome, I don't see it anymore and I never did see a lot of it. I have a friend in town that sees it in deer in town. More deer in town then any where else. They can get away from some of the predators by hugging the city.
Check out page 11 on this report.http://access.nwifc.org/wildlife/documents/makah-fawn-report-final.pdf
If only 30% of fawns survive that doesn't leave *censored* for us to hunt.