Free: Contests & Raffles.
beeman- sure it is selfish.... we all are by nature. defending a "preferred method" is being selfish if it is for a want of yours. it is hard to convey the tone in my voice through a keyboard so please don't think what i am saying is like me calling you a selfish prick (that is an example, not what i am actually saying LOL). the reason you are defending it is because YOU like it..... not because of what it may or may not do for the herd.as far as the analogy thing goes..... rifles and scopes are a totally separate issue. modern firearms are just that.... modern.... anything goes..... and remember, telescopic sights were around before modern cartridge guns.... so we could make the argument that they should be used on muzzys. while i do agree that limiting rifles to open sights would decrease success to some degree, do you think the percentage would be as great as when bear baiting was outlawed? we'll never know any hard numbers but i think we know the answer.the bear thing was brought up as an example..... i do consitently kill bears..... with a bow...... without baits..... by stalking.... in WA. trust me when i say..... i am not jealous of anyone or what they do. i can and do kill big animals very consistently in multiple states. i'm not trying to be pompous, just stating a fact.so would you be for or against the use of hounds in deer hunting here in WA?
I guess we are all selfish then.
Second I know that rifles and scopes are a completely different issue that's the point. I may not use that method but just cause I don't use it doesent mean I'm out to get it banned! Rifles have a much more negative impact on deer populations than baits so why no fuss over their use?
Just don't agree that it should be ok for one animal (Bear) and not for (Deer)! And I would be against hounds for hunting deer, It would be too hard getting the deer out of the tree after I killed it!.....
And I quite frankly don't see any evidence that it is detrimental to heard health, in fact I see it the exact opposite. Baiting is the only hunting method that I know of that actually gives something beneficial back to the very animals we are targeting. You cant tell me that alfalfa, corn, grain, mineral blocks etc... don't boost whitetail health and increase their survival rates going into winter. The deer obviously recognize this as well, otherwise they wouldn't show any interest in the baits. They go to the baits because they recognize it as a great food source, just as they recognize alfalfa fields etc.. as a great food source and they utilize them all year long. Any given bait can have as many as 20-40 deer coming in on a regular basis, of these only 1 (and in many cases none) are killed and the rest reap the benefits of free food and fatter bellies. Yes it alters their natural feeding habits, (temporarily!) As soon as the baits are gone they go right back to their old patterns, habits and wintering areas! (fatter and happier i might add.) These animals have survived all that nature has thrown at them and thrived for thousands of years and I don't think that a few bails of hay put out for them to eat a few weeks out of each year has any negative impact on their future prospects of survival.
feeding whitetails smack in the middle of a bad winter is too late. Read what happened in MI years ago, spent millions to feed the deer during one of their worst winters ever, thousands of deer died with full bellys of alfalfa. When deer get to the point of starvation, enzymes in their stomachs change to ba able digest woody browse things otherwise they would never eat, spring and summer.. u introduce leafy green alfalfa and they cant break it down, bloat and die
Posted by: BeeManQuoteAnd I quite frankly don't see any evidence that it is detrimental to heard health, in fact I see it the exact opposite. Baiting is the only hunting method that I know of that actually gives something beneficial back to the very animals we are targeting. You cant tell me that alfalfa, corn, grain, mineral blocks etc... don't boost whitetail health and increase their survival rates going into winter. The deer obviously recognize this as well, otherwise they wouldn't show any interest in the baits. They go to the baits because they recognize it as a great food source, just as they recognize alfalfa fields etc.. as a great food source and they utilize them all year long. Any given bait can have as many as 20-40 deer coming in on a regular basis, of these only 1 (and in many cases none) are killed and the rest reap the benefits of free food and fatter bellies. Yes it alters their natural feeding habits, (temporarily!) As soon as the baits are gone they go right back to their old patterns, habits and wintering areas! (fatter and happier i might add.) These animals have survived all that nature has thrown at them and thrived for thousands of years and I don't think that a few bails of hay put out for them to eat a few weeks out of each year has any negative impact on their future prospects of survival. I'm not knocking the practice baiting....but here's an fyi.January 9, 2008KLAMATH FALLS (AP) — Humans who feel sorry for the deer in the winter can do more harm by feeding them, say some wildlife experts.Six deer found dead in the Klamath Falls area recently probably died because they were fed an improper diet by humans, officials say.“Looking at some stomach contents, I’m seeing grain and alfalfa and things they’re not supposed to be eating this time of year,” said Liz Diver, who operates the nonprofit Badger Run Wildlife Rehabilitation Center. “I’ve also run into people in the feed store buying grain for the deer, which can be fatal.”She said people believe they’re helping deer by feeding them during the winter, she said.“When you give them apples, carrots, alfalfa and grain, their gut cannot handle it,” Diver said. “They get something very similar to colic.”Tom Collom, district wildlife biologist with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, agreed.He said deer have complex digestive tracts that depend on proper levels of vitamins, minerals and bacteria to digest food.“If they are subjected to a quick change in diet it takes their system quite a while to change that bacteria makeup to be able to digest that food,” Collom said. “It sets the stage where animals can starve to death on a full stomach.”A rapid change in diet actually inhibits the deer’s ability to use the food they take in, he said.Collom said feeding wildlife other than birds is against the law in the city of Klamath Falls under an ordinance approved in the 1990s.Diver said she’s trying to spread the word that feeding deer might end up killing them.“Sometimes it’s accidental,” Diver said. “The deer are getting into people’s hay barns where they’ve got it stashed for their horses.“But you can also walk into feed stores and find people buying sacks of grain and things with the intent of feeding the deer because they feel sorry for them.”AND.....http://wdfw.wa.gov/living/winter_feeding/wildlife.htmlIf you read this you will see they are talking about feeding throughout the winter....not feeding for a few weeks then when the season is over....no more free food. Also, I would imagine it would be different if the deer were near naturally occurring agricultural fields, not in heavily forested areas with no supplimental feed.