Free: Contests & Raffles.
Wow there sure are a lot of proud cow killers on this sight.
I was a little heated when writing my last post. My father had a calf watch him field dress it's mother when I was just a little kid and he told me it was a horrible experience for him so he raised me to not shoot cows, and I'm pretty passionate about it. (if you can't tell ) I just feel that the whole state gets managed as one unit not for each gmu on it's own. The starving elk at st Helens get all the publicity so everyone assumes there are too many elk statewide which couldn't be farther from the truth. Our herds have a lot of room to grow as far as #'s go in my opinion. Oregon has twice the elk herd we do, why is that? I just want more elk in this state and I don't think giving out 6125 cow tags is the way to achieve that.
There are more elk in Oregon because there is way, way, way, more habitat for elk in Oregon. And a lot less people there too.
Quote from: blacktail luv on June 19, 2011, 07:18:32 PMI was a little heated when writing my last post. My father had a calf watch him field dress it's mother when I was just a little kid and he told me it was a horrible experience for him so he raised me to not shoot cows, and I'm pretty passionate about it. (if you can't tell ) I just feel that the whole state gets managed as one unit not for each gmu on it's own. The starving elk at st Helens get all the publicity so everyone assumes there are too many elk statewide which couldn't be farther from the truth. Our herds have a lot of room to grow as far as #'s go in my opinion. Oregon has twice the elk herd we do, why is that? I just want more elk in this state and I don't think giving out 6125 cow tags is the way to achieve that. We all want more elk. And you are correct that the herds were bigger. But really though, with the logging all but gone in most of the Lewis River, Souixon and the Wind could it be that there just isn't the habitat to support those big herds anymore?