Free: Contests & Raffles.
Nice cover boneaddict. I see that late muzzleloader blacktail season is still starting a day later than the late archery. Does anyone know why that is? I wrote a letter to the WDFW a couple months ago and asked them about it, and if they could change it so that muzzleloader would open the same day as archery, but I never got a reply back. I still thought they might listen to me and change it but now I see that my request fell on deaf ears. I see another change- they added the average points of the people who drew permits, for each hunt, along with the number of applications for that hunt. I sure wish they wouldn't do that. All that's going to do is give people false hope. We see it all the time on here where people ask how many points does it "take" to draw a certain hunt. Well, the average points of the people who happened to draw a permit is NOT the same as the number of points it "takes." Just as an example, look at the modern firearm Peaches Ridge permit that was September 19-23. There were 1,524 applications for that hunt, and the average number of points was three.
They split up the Dayton bull tags this year! Great I wanna waste my points to only hunt land outside the national forest! I like the extra bullTags they did add in the blues but why split up that hunt!?
Quote from: bobcat on April 13, 2011, 07:35:17 PMNice cover boneaddict. I see that late muzzleloader blacktail season is still starting a day later than the late archery. Does anyone know why that is? I wrote a letter to the WDFW a couple months ago and asked them about it, and if they could change it so that muzzleloader would open the same day as archery, but I never got a reply back. I still thought they might listen to me and change it but now I see that my request fell on deaf ears. I see another change- they added the average points of the people who drew permits, for each hunt, along with the number of applications for that hunt. I sure wish they wouldn't do that. All that's going to do is give people false hope. We see it all the time on here where people ask how many points does it "take" to draw a certain hunt. Well, the average points of the people who happened to draw a permit is NOT the same as the number of points it "takes." Just as an example, look at the modern firearm Peaches Ridge permit that was September 19-23. There were 1,524 applications for that hunt, and the average number of points was three. Marketing tactic. Makes people think they have a chance, therefore WDFW will sell a bunch of apps to guys that think the average number of points actually means something.