Free: Contests & Raffles.
Well Jerry, I'm not sure what to say to that. I don't disagree. There are a lot of things the WDFW could do to make things better for us hunters. But, in a lot of ways their hands are tied. A couple of major issues, the tribal hunting/poaching problem, and the predator problem we have no effective way to manage them with having the option of hound hunting being taken away by the voters of the state. I was just trying to point out that it's not 1975 anymore, we have a lot more people in the state, a lot more predators, and less deer and elk.
Quote from: bobcat on December 27, 2010, 10:00:53 PMWell Jerry, I'm not sure what to say to that. I don't disagree. There are a lot of things the WDFW could do to make things better for us hunters. But, in a lot of ways their hands are tied. A couple of major issues, the tribal hunting/poaching problem, and the predator problem we have no effective way to manage them with having the option of hound hunting being taken away by the voters of the state. I was just trying to point out that it's not 1975 anymore, we have a lot more people in the state, a lot more predators, and less deer and elk.WDFW's hands are not tied. Their management agenda is directed by choice and lack of not knowing how to do things efficiently. They use science as a deflector for reasonable approaches to solving resource issues. Money is wasted in most areas by over management and too many cooks in the kitchen...or too many chiefs and not enough indians.Dave is spot on.........like it or not. Your view of WDFW, the resource and what we have to accept is tainted. Stop drinking the department's kool aid.....it's not good for you. The whole agency needs reform......enough said.The example above of the Klickitat and WDFW's response from the quoted sources is sad. It's become an individual's wildlife area....not yours. That female manager works for you....but unfortunately all those tree hugger types now entrenched in WDFW, think otherwise.
Game Regulations for 2011The Department is considering rule making for the following: Game management unit boundaries; deer and elk area boundaries; deer, elk, mountain goat, bighorn sheep, moose, cougar, black bear, and turkey seasons and permit levels; special closures and firearm restriction areas; harvest reporting; trapping regulations; and private lands public access.