Free: Contests & Raffles.
Right now there are so many predators that a fawn is very lucky to make it to adulthood.I see in the new proposal they want to limit the fall bear hunt, restrict the number of cougar that can be taken by boot hunters, and make it harder to legally kill a coyote.
Quote from: bearpaw on February 05, 2012, 12:32:20 PMRight now there are so many predators that a fawn is very lucky to make it to adulthood.I see in the new proposal they want to limit the fall bear hunt, restrict the number of cougar that can be taken by boot hunters, and make it harder to legally kill a coyote.i like to try to find good or positiveness in what there doing. we have a real predator problem here and i think bears are probably at the top of the list rite now? i saw 27 different ones last season just driving around? 4 diffident ones in one day? it would be sad to see that happen
Quote from: huntnnw on February 02, 2012, 06:14:51 AMI dont think that would happen..alot of guys hunt for bucks only... then some want to meat in the freezer and blast a young buck on the last weekend when many would shoot a doe instead if they had the choice. ID has been very liberal with their whitetail seasons and the herd does just fine in ID..hunting pressure less? maybe alot of public land to be hunted there as opposed to a ton of private land here in NE WAEastman's did a survey of hunter satisfaction with western big game management, Idaho came in a distant last place.
I dont think that would happen..alot of guys hunt for bucks only... then some want to meat in the freezer and blast a young buck on the last weekend when many would shoot a doe instead if they had the choice. ID has been very liberal with their whitetail seasons and the herd does just fine in ID..hunting pressure less? maybe alot of public land to be hunted there as opposed to a ton of private land here in NE WA
no data supports this thesis; I'm not sure if there is or isn't any date. but it is obvious that if a deer is a year older and out of that baby/stupid stage he will be a little wiser,
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. Prior to the new rules, about 20 percent of the total buck harvest consisted of mature (two years or older) deer. Now, 2-1/2-year-old bucks make up 75 percent of Pennsylvania’s “mature” buck harvest.
Pennsylvania instituted its antler restrictions largely as a result of an extremely low buck-to-doe ratio and a disproportionately low number of mature bucks. There was also some concern among hunters over the lack of quality bucks. By drastically increasing the doe harvest through increases in permits and by cutting down on the buck harvest, biologists have been able to bring the herd into better balance.
Over the past 15 years I have helped establish antlerless harvest goals for numerous properties throughout the country. In almost all cases, I have recommended goals well above those previously established. Often, shortly after my goals are announced, the room becomes quiet as the hunters quickly do the math and realize the enormity of the task at hand. Occasionally, I’ll even get the question, “I know we need to take a lot of does now, but when can we stop killing so many?” As most serious QDM practitioners realize, this day never comes.
QDM in Pennsylvania — 2002The 2002 deer season was designed to decrease buck harvest and increase antlerless harvest. The PGC also allocated more than 1 million antlerless licenses, or approximately 150,000 more than the previous record in 1991.
Since 2004 we have been testing an Antler Point Restriction in 29 Missouri counties to see if it would reduce the percentage of does in the deer population. The APR requires a buck to have at least 4 points on one side to be legal. The restriction applied to the archery season and all portions of the firearms season except the youth portion. The expectation was that restricting the bucks that could be taken would promote a larger doe harvest. An additional benefit of this restriction would be that more bucks survive longer and grow antlers large enough to be considered trophies by hunters.
Cornicelli says antler-point restrictions work on the principle that most hunters harvest only one deer each season, no matter the bag limit. "If a hunter doesn't think they are going to get an opportunity at a mature buck, some of them will harvest a doe because they want the venison," he says.
Has Mississippi’s antler restriction been effective at increasing the age structure of the buck harvest? Yes! The average age of harvested bucks before the 4-point antler restriction was 1.8 years old. The average age of harvest- ed bucks after the antler restriction was 2 1⁄ 2 years oldThe bottom line is that protecting 1 1⁄ 2 -year oldbucks with a 4-point antler restriction on public hunting areas did not substantially increase the harvest of older- aged bucks in later years on these areas.
WAY TIRED OF PA STUDYS! QUIT COMPARING
Quote from: bearpaw on February 05, 2012, 12:32:20 PMRight now there are so many predators that a fawn is very lucky to make it to adulthood.I see in the new proposal they want to limit the fall bear hunt, restrict the number of cougar that can be taken by boot hunters, and make it harder to legally kill a coyote. I'm with you Dale! I'm gonna start huntin in other states with you! I'm so fed up with the liberal morons in wdfw! It getting to the point that it would be worth the out of state expense to not have to put up with this crap! No matter which way you slice the 4 pt minimum, for every smart thing they do there are ten things they are bending us over for!
no crap MILES.....some dont get it. They complain of overhunting....dont think most hunters in this state have seen real pressure I can go on ANY given day in the general elk or deer season and find a great place to hunt without every running into anyone
QuoteWAY TIRED OF PA STUDYS! QUIT COMPARINGthen, please......explain to me what "data" was used to make this decision? The biologist's were against it, so it certainly didn't come from them. Please, somebody point me to a study, or some other credible scientific data, that shows APR's will work in the situation we have in NE WA???who did these stakeholders who were pushing this get their biological data from to come up with this plan??Let's stop kidding ourselves.......the people pushing this went right to QDM and Eastern US whitetail examples to justify this rule; it is as simple as that; earlier in this thread BP even showed us an email he sent to the PA game commission!The bottom line is that there is NO data supporting what they are doing...........did they hire some private biologist to render them a professional opinion on this??? Or did they just come up with it on their own?? So, impress me, where did they get this idea to implement an APR???The idea had to come from somewhere.......Don't kid yourself..........they used APR's in Eastern States and QDM philosophies to justify this rule.............and, unfortunately, they didn't even do their homework properly because anybody with any professional training or experience would understand that our whitetail herds are vastly different;We ALREADY know how APR's work in this State when you don't have an antlerless option, and, you don't cut tag numbers.............The result is permantly shortened seasons with no better hunting, no better herds, poorer mature bucks, but, the avg buck harvested being 2.5 yr old instead of 1.5 yr old;Thats the legacy so, you don't have to go far to understand how its going to work; you guys act like there is something magical in 117 and 121 with Unicorns running around crapping skittles or something, and that unit is special and the APR's are going to magically "save" the herds, when that hasn't been the case in any unit in the state with muleys or whitetails.Sorry, there is nothing special about those units; and the APR's are going to work there they same they do in the rest of the state; you are going to have high hunter satisfication because harvest age goes up by one year; which means you will never get rid of it; and, over time you will end up with a shorter and shorter season; and, you will have no better buck to doe ratio, no better herd numbers (because how does a few extra 1.5 yr old bucks in the population help the herd) and most likely poorer numbers of 4.5 yr old or better animals.You want to fix the herds in NE??? Save the mommas and help them make more babies.........adding a few extra 1.5 yr old bucks into the population, or coming up with goofy regulations to force hunting pressure into other units is not the long term answer.