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i wish this would go statewide except for youth , disabled, and the seniors.. and of course this is my opinion,
I would love to see alot more competition amongst the bucks for the breeding.
does being bred in a timeley manner. To see june, july and even august newborns is not good......july newborns struggle to make the first winter, august newbies dont usually make it. They might this year, whats left of them.....we see them born, and we know when they disappear.....coyotes hunt them relentlesly.
Where it has been instituted, either through regulations or through voluntary cooperation by clubs and individual hunters, antler restrictions have resulted in more bigger bucks in the entire population. Bigger, however, is a relative term. Data compiled by the PGC shows that while yearling bucks are indeed surviving at higher rates, most are being harvested the first year they are legal.
Now, 2-1/2-year-old bucks make up 75 percent of Pennsylvania’s “mature” buck harvest.
EVERY respectable study on Eastern US Whitetail APR's says that there is very little recuruitment out of the 2.5 yr old classquote from the Pennsylvania Game Commission (this after 10 yrs of APR's):"Where it has been instituted, either through regulations or through voluntary cooperation by clubs and individual hunters, antler restrictions have resulted in more bigger bucks in the entire population. Bigger, however, is a relative term. Data compiled by the PGC shows that while yearling bucks are indeed surviving at higher rates, most are being harvested the first year they are legal."
Now some of you will say well, only 75% of the 2.5 yr olds are being killed, so there is recruitment into the 3.5 yr old class; while that is true in Penn. it takes a more sophisticated understanding of what is going on there to understand why it won't work here.The "big difference" that nobody around here seems to want to admit, or even understand, is that in these Eastern US States with APR's, they set the rules up for either sex;So, the avg hunter has an ANTLERLESS option. This "pulls" pressure away from the buck population; In Penn. last year, 60% of the harvest was antlerless deer. That means 60% of the hunter pressure was directed away from bucks and onto the antlerless population.Where is that extra 25% of hunter harvest going to be directed in 117 and 121 now? On antlerless.................nope..............on bucks older then 2.5 yrs old.Now contrast that with what is going on here; no antlerless option; and, you have instituted this program in the two hunting units that receive the most hunting pressure of any units in this State; No reduction in tags, no reduction in season length; they kept the rut hunt.......I am not saying that this rule is going to kill every mature buck out there, but, the problem is, it exacerbates an already severe problem that our deer herds have, and, that is extremely poor age structure, and the corresponding problems that causes.It puts increased pressure on an already stressed component of the deer population (the mature bucks)All the APR does is increase the age of the avg harvested buck by 1 yr; that is what it does; 127 and the Palouse units have had APR's for quite a while now, and those units are mostly private and LOW hunting pressure (compared to 117 and 121);Explain to me why we are not seeing an explosion of 160 class Whitetail bucks, or better, being harvested in those units??? You guys all think this rule is going to make big bucks??? Where are they in those units?? Certainly by now, they should have shown up in the harvest category if the APR was working to make bigger bucks??
It puts increased pressure on an already stressed component of the deer population (the mature bucks)
what has become obvious for me concerning this rule is that the "backstory" most likely ( I have no proof of this, just my opinion) is it was pushed so hard not because it is some magical bullet; but, rather, because the people pushing it knew that it would most likely result, at least in the short run, lower hunter pressure on these units.the problem is, all this does in the short run is drive the hunters into neighboring units which skews the pressure and harvest higher in the neighboring units then it would have been;that is the problem when you do not manage the seasons and units in a comprehensive manner. There is, and was no, scientific basis for this rule change; the biologists knew this and that is why they were so against it. Using eastern US whitetail herds and APR's rules from these states, as a basis to manage our whitetail herds, is simply naive, at best, and I am trying to be nice with that statement......so the people pushing this were either incredibly naive OR had another agenda.........those are the only two options.....The real problem here is that with many avg, DIY hunters out there, they think this is a great rule change because they think hey, if nobody is shooting the small bucks its going to make lots of mature bucks! Others are actually against this rule because they think this is about turning this area into a trophy unit!!So, the misinformation out there is pretty deep on this from both sides........its just too bad the WDFW didn't stand up to the pressure and do what their biologists said
Everyone else got big mature bucks
If past WA deer management was so good, why was our NE deer herd still declining, even after a mild winter?
If you guys are so correct, why are many Washington deer herds struggling in so many areas?
I would suggest you open your minds to other management styles which have worked in other areas.
Perfect Example: Some of you guys still think wolves will fit in without impacts and that has long been proven incorrect in several other states.
Modern wildlife biology is a joke. You guys have all been brainwashed by anti-hunting college professors who promote predators and could care less about our ungulate herds and hunter opportunity. You need to look seriously at how real "Game" Biologists managed wildlife 30-40 years ago when we had large deer herds in most every state in spite of larger numbers of hunters. Reduce the cougar, coyotes, eliminate wolves, and alas, you will have abundant herds of healthy animals. I get tired of hearing you guys use habitat as an excuse. NE Washington has plenty of winter range and it's empty, almost void of deer. I used to go in the same areas and see hundreds of wintering deer. Don't try to say it's loss of habitat, that's a cop out, there is plenty of winter range on national forest that's nearly barren of deer. The problem is all these predators, there are record numbers of predators, the total predator footprint is staggering.