Free: Contests & Raffles.
There are plenty of does throughout the valley right now, most are on private land in the river bottoms.
I think Deer management has lost ground, many herds are at a fraction of former numbers and steadily declining. The combination of high predator numbers, liberal tag sales, poaching, tribal hunting, hard winters, and loss of winter range has compounded the negative factors for a devastating effect on deer numbers in many areas
Phool and I have always disagreed on that, and probably always will. Thats ok though.
The herds have already been devastated. I've been hunting there for over 12 years and my dad for 25, and this year we have seen fewer deer than ever. This is not just a coincidence. And obviously you have to work hard to get into good bucks, but that is always the case. It is definitely harder to do that, though, when the deer numbers are down. I don't believe Fitkin. Just looking at the tally on Highway 153 shows me that less deer have been hit this year as well. The deer numbers are definitely down, and the fact that far less does have yearlings this year is proof of that.
Quote from: boneaddict on October 19, 2011, 05:20:04 AMPhool and I have always disagreed on that, and probably always will. Thats ok though. Whats funny is how many don't believe it when WDFW says the deer numbers are good, but they do believe WDFW when they say wolves won't have an impact on the herds and although "translocation" is written into the proposed wolf plan, "it won't be used"
Quote from: link=topic=85525.msg1072065#msg1072065 date=1319043138Also, the Fitkin comment was a joke, like the man.Quote from: link=topic=85525.msg1072165#msg1072165 date=1319048637Quote from: link=topic=85525.msg1071763#msg1071763 date=1319026804
Quote from: link=topic=85525.msg1071763#msg1071763 date=1319026804