Free: Contests & Raffles.
I think a 4pt APR in all GMU's would be nice but I doubt that will happen. I see your point with displacing hunters...but I think it would equal out because for the hunters moving to other units there will likely be a near equal amount of hunters primarily hunting that unit due to the 4pt minimum. I know it would be more appealing to me.
In 5 yrs, the buck population will consist of a high amount of 1.5 and 2.5 yr old animals; these are the most vulnerable bucks in the buck group;if you suddenly open the season to any buck after 5 yrs of APR, you will have a wholesale slaughter of this age class of bucks; especially with the late season structure that is place.
BP,QuoteAre you saying that APR was not effective at building a better deer herd south of Spokane? Most of the people seem to like the APR south of Spokane.what I am saying is that south of spokane is a vastly different unit then north of spokane; now, HNW can say what he wants, but, nobody that is knowledgeable of the units would say that north of the river units and south of the river units are the same.They are vastly different;APR's are less destructive in these situations:1. high private ground2. thicker vegetation terrain3. lower hunter pressurebut, the bottom line is, they always result in the same general problem: harvest is focused on older age class animals.I dare say, that more older age class deer would be available south of the river without it........just my opinion..........if anybody thinks that north of the river is going to equal south of the river whitetail's in 5 yrs with APR's is just wrong.........that seems to be what HNW is saying;if only we had APR's north of the river, it would be the same as south of the river;My main problem with APR's is they are just a short term solution to a long term problem in this State, and they inflict a HIGH cost on the structure of the population.Like any good idea, lets discuss the exit strategy first......I will go back to the idea of how do you get of APR's?In 5 yrs, the buck population will consist of a high amount of 1.5 and 2.5 yr old animals; these are the most vulnerable bucks in the buck group;if you suddenly open the season to any buck after 5 yrs of APR, you will have a wholesale slaughter of this age class of bucks; especially with the late season structure that is place.the reason APR's work is it guarantees a steady recruitmant of 1.5 yr old deer into the 2.5 yr old deer class (the harvest group).If you open it up, there will be virtually zero bucks that make it past 2.5 yrs old; you will almost guaranteee that you have lower recruitment into the 3.5 yr old class.this is why it is a trap; there is no easy "out" once you institute it; once you get rid of it, you have to somehow "regulate" the harvest of 1.5 and 2.5 yr old bucks to make sure they don't get all shot.to say that we will simply "get rid of it" is not realistic....yes, you can get rid of it, but, you will essentially take out two age classes of bucks with it when you do.define the exit strategy........
Are you saying that APR was not effective at building a better deer herd south of Spokane? Most of the people seem to like the APR south of Spokane.
BP,QuoteAre you saying that APR was not effective at building a better deer herd south of Spokane? Most of the people seem to like the APR south of Spokane.what I am saying is that south of spokane is a vastly different unit then north of spokane; now, HNW can say what he wants, but, nobody that is knowledgeable of the units would say that north of the river units and south of the river units are the same.I believe HNW is extremely knowledgeable of the units. He was pointing to Mica Peak specifically in a few examples and that is very similar to the environment you see north of the river. While it is not national forest much of it is timber company land that is similar to the land up north and actually seems to receive more pressure than some areas of the national forest lands in the GMU's north of the river. I don't think he is referring to the entire unit.They are vastly different;APR's are less destructive in these situations:1. high private ground2. thicker vegetation terrain3. lower hunter pressureCan you provide scientific references for APR's being destructive outside of your given parameters?I have read about this since the mid/late 80's and I have never read anything that supports your position that these requirements are necessary for APR's to be less destructive. That being said if there is something scientific that supports your position I would love to read about. I don't like being uninformed when it comes to whitetail.but, the bottom line is, they always result in the same general problem: harvest is focused on older age class animals.I dare say, that more older age class deer would be available south of the river without it........just my opinion..........if anybody thinks that north of the river is going to equal south of the river whitetail's in 5 yrs with APR's is just wrong.........that seems to be what HNW is saying;if only we had APR's north of the river, it would be the same as south of the river;While north and south of the river are different they both offer their own unique protections. South of the river there is less pressure and more private land (as you stated)..north of the river there is more cover (cover is one of the most important aspects to survival from hunting pressure). By protecting the yearlings you will lead to a higher recruitment to the 2 1/2+ age class. Thus the 2 1/2 plus age class will support the extra focus....and every year you will be recruiting X number of yearlings since they are protected so it's a wash. You are basically just ensuring there are more bucks in the herd after any given hunting season. However, I don't see it as a drastic measure nor do I believe drastic measures are required at this time.One point to be made is that we would protect genetically inferior 3pt's and thus pass on that gene.. I have hunted whitetail all over the country in high pressure areas with genetics and nutrition inferior to what we have here in Washington and I can count on one hand the number of 3pt or less mature bucks that I have seen (all in the deep south and this includes 4pt APR areas). Now..that being said I have probably seen well over 100 supposedly mature 3pt or less bucks "on the downhill slide" (per the hunters claims) bucks but in actuality nearly all of them were yearlings. My main problem with APR's is they are just a short term solution to a long term problem in this State, and they inflict a HIGH cost on the structure of the population.Like any good idea, lets discuss the exit strategy first......I will go back to the idea of how do you get of APR's?In 5 yrs, the buck population will consist of a high amount of 1.5 and 2.5 yr old animals; these are the most vulnerable bucks in the buck group;if you suddenly open the season to any buck after 5 yrs of APR, you will have a wholesale slaughter of this age class of bucks; especially with the late season structure that is place.the reason APR's work is it guarantees a steady recruitmant of 1.5 yr old deer into the 2.5 yr old deer class (the harvest group).If you open it up, there will be virtually zero bucks that make it past 2.5 yrs old; you will almost guaranteee that you have lower recruitment into the 3.5 yr old class.this is why it is a trap; there is no easy "out" once you institute it; once you get rid of it, you have to somehow "regulate" the harvest of 1.5 and 2.5 yr old bucks to make sure they don't get all shot.to say that we will simply "get rid of it" is not realistic....yes, you can get rid of it, but, you will essentially take out two age classes of bucks with it when you do.define the exit strategy........This is a personal observation: Out of thousands of whitetail bucks that I have seen there is only a small number of 2.5 year olds that do not meet the 4pt minimum...thus legal under the 4pt rule. Therefore opening it after 5 years would not have some huge impact on the 2.5 year olds that you mention. Please let me know if your personal observations are different on this.. I would be very interested if they are.You also mention if we open the season to any buck after 5 yrs of APR that we will see a wholesale slaughter of the 1.5 age class. I contend....isn't that what we already see???...and if not....then why the resistance to the 4pt. minimums.. to me it appears the point you are arguing and what you are against contradict each other in this instance. Either a current wholesale slaughter of yearlings exists currently and we should protect them....or....a wholesale slaughter of yearlings doesn't exist and a 4pt minimum would make little difference aside from protecting a number of yearlings for recruitment to the older age classes (which almost all hunters prefer to kill anyway)To summarize my ramblings. Why do we need an exit strategy or protections (when coming off a 4pt rule) if nearly all 2.5 year olds would be legal under a 4pt APR anyway?....and why would we need protections for 1.5 year old bucks when there will be no less recruitement and no less harvest pressure under the current rule of no 4pt minimum. Again from my deductions of your position I don't see the validity of your argument in this case. However, I am definitely interested in hearing more in case I misunderstood your position (which I am commonly known to do).
How does the rising wolf population come into play in this discussion?
I read through your post muleyguy, it appears most of why you say APR's will not work is speculation. You presented no facts showing APR will not work in NE WA, and in fact made several statements that define what is currently happening in NE WA, which is the basis of why people want to try APR's in NE WA.
I hope you're right. I just see a whole bunch of hunters migrating to an any buck unit late in the season to fill their tag, especially in the first few years. The problem they are pitching is throughout the NE, not just confined to the proposed APR units, so increasing pressure on the deer in the adjoining units could be devastating. I think this whole proposal is poorly thought out and being pushed for the wrong reasons. Now that we have had a few mild years and the population is on the rise they are pushing even harder to get it done immediately. I think a little more time to study this and see what happens is a much better idea.
im all for it.. I hunt mature deer and they always have at least four points.. It would be nice to see it... Take a drive through colville nov 15th and look at forty dead two and a half year old bucks in the back of pickups and just think how many more mature bucks there would be if it was mature buck or go home empty handed.. And on that note i dont think there should be a late rifle season either in NE washington ferry county dont have one and the age and trophy class of the witetails is far greater than on the other side of the river... I think that is proof that late buck hurts the whitetal numbers severly in stevens county...