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That was definately done by the Yakamas at the firing center. And they definately are pretty skilled at deer hunting.
We have had 6 bucks piled up in the back of a truck coming home from Republic before. Got a lot of thumbs up on the way back to the wet side and a few dirty looks. The difference is that it was obvious that we weren't tribal "hunters". The trucks that I speak of with deer piled in them were driven by well known tribal members with tribal decals all over the rig. There was no doubt what was going on. Sometime ask the guy on the Keller Ferry about how many truck loads of tribal killed deer go across there.
I got a bowteck sticker in my window guess the guy that had the truck before me was a bow hunter.
Our area used to be one of the most popular and productive for deer, but the population of mule deer crashed about five years ago and has not come back.“It has been bouncing around,” Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist Jeff Bernatowicz said of the local deer population. “There may be a slight increase in the population, but it is nothing significant. I’m not real optimistic about the deer season.”Hunters in Population Management Unit (PMU) 33, which encompasses Yakima County, have had the poorest success rate in the state for deer, Bernatowicz said.On top of that, Muckleshoot tribal hunters harvested 130 bucks in the Yakima area last fall and winter. Muckleshoot tribal regulations don’t include antler restrictions, so many of the younger bucks — which would make up the 3-point or better bucks this year — just won’t be there for hunters this year.“I would say that hunters could go probably anywhere else and have more chance of success,” Bernatowicz said.