Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: colockumelk on November 24, 2011, 05:55:51 AMAnd for everyone else. I have compared PA APR rules as an example of how it works with whitetails and was told over and over again how you camt compare WA and PA. I've even compared South of I90 with APRs and North of I90 without APRs and was told you can't compare the two. (Really people) but when Dave compares OH with WA (which I think was a good example BTW) no one says anything. On another thread I said how NY does a better job than WA showing the same type of stats Dave put up and got ripped by people. Again you can't compare the two. I guess for some people its easier to dismiss someone's research or sources as "irrelevant" or "apples to oranges" than provide a good counterargument.The way I read it, you are focusing more on the methods other states are using---ex: APRs for WT and if that translates to WA muleys. And it seems like Dave is pointing out the change over time to opportunity because of different game depts--ex: WA has had a decline in hunters, herd, harvest; but OH is increasing all 3. What you are discussing is more debateable because it is one of the available tools and there is science for and against as well as personal observations. What Dave seems to throw around (with the OH comparison) is harder to counter because it isn't the method, it's the numbers.
And for everyone else. I have compared PA APR rules as an example of how it works with whitetails and was told over and over again how you camt compare WA and PA. I've even compared South of I90 with APRs and North of I90 without APRs and was told you can't compare the two. (Really people) but when Dave compares OH with WA (which I think was a good example BTW) no one says anything. On another thread I said how NY does a better job than WA showing the same type of stats Dave put up and got ripped by people. Again you can't compare the two. I guess for some people its easier to dismiss someone's research or sources as "irrelevant" or "apples to oranges" than provide a good counterargument.
I've even compared South of I90 with APRs and North of I90 without APRs and was told you can't compare the two. (Really people)
Dave, maybe you need to apply for a job at the WDFW then. It sounds like you have all the answers.
Oh, and Dave, I'd love to hunt out of state every year but I cannot afford it. I think I'll be stuck here in Washington and only Washington for the next 10 years or so.
Quote from: bobcat on November 23, 2011, 07:15:43 PMOh, and Dave, I'd love to hunt out of state every year but I cannot afford it. I think I'll be stuck here in Washington and only Washington for the next 10 years or so. I thought Dale (Bearpaw) was giving all his moderators a free out of state hunt every year?
I take it you moved here from elsewhere. Or, at the very least, you have not had the experience that others have had over a much longer hunting career.
You want fewer people in the woods and lower harvest. Begging your pardon, but that seems rather selfish. I know the woods don't belong to me. Others enjoy their time here, too.
And I am interested in seeing better and more productive hunting and more game animals...and that is possible here because we have the land to do it.
The "Less is More" approach is not simply wrong, it is wrong-headed. It plays into the hands of wildlife managers who seem more interested in spending their time with studies and data-gathering instead of getting their hands dirty improving habitat and expanding game herds.
Too many people have grown up listening to, and believing, the bull$#!t about "We've got to learn to get along with less." Tell that to the NWTF, which has enhanced and grown wild turkey populations all over and even helped out in Washington until the WDFW crapped on the turkey program.
Ask those Ohio deer hunters I wrote about earlier. When I first started writing about the disparity between Washington and Ohio, the annual harvest there hovered around 98,000 to 100,000 deer. That's more than doubled in the past 25 years despite a growing population in Ohio that is about twice our population.
I've hunted in other states and seen with they can do with habitat not much different than ours and winter weather that is downright fearsome compared to what you find over most of this state. In Utah, I counted about 400 deer in three days of hunting and deliberately killed a cull buck 2x3 when I could have waited and whacked a big 4x4.
But, of course, in Utah, Wyoming and Montana, the game departments know and APPRECIATE who pays their salaries and they know what makes money...and it sure isn't watching animals at a winter feed station or sitting on one's @$$ listening for the howl of a Frigging wolf. Ditto in Idaho, where I am likely to land next November.The only way to make these people respond is to hammer them hard and make them accountable. Tell them to produce or pack and make room for someone who can.
Name the common denominator among the following scenarios:It is mid-September. You have spent a long day in the saddle, following a steadily climbing trail into the north Cascade Mountains’ Pasayten Wilderness Area. The sky is flawlessly blue, the temperature is in the 60s, and your old Model 70 Winchester .270 is secured to the scabbard on the flanks of an Appaloosa. There are only a couple more miles to your base camp, from which you will hunt mule deer for the next five days.It is early October. Before daylight you had launched your boat, the one you use in the summer to fish for Hanford Reach salmon, at a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers boat ramp on the upper Snake River. You are nearing the dry creek mouth where you will beach your boat to hunt the brushy canyon above the river for white-tailed deer with a muzzleloader.It is mid-December. Rain has fallen for the past three days, and you can no longer see Hood Canal far below your stand on a ridge above Thorndyke Bay. You have hiked up to your stand every morning for a week. There was plenty of sign around the intersection of trails in front of your blind during the rut, but none of the blacktail bucks you saw earlier in the season have come within bow range.The common theme? These events all took place in Washington. Indeed, Evergreen State deer hunters have a wider range of hunting opportunity than hunters enjoy in virtually any other region in the country. This is true in terms of species – with blacktails, whitetails and mule deer inhabiting the state – and the settings and habitats where they live.The mule deer scenario above, for example, occurred during the September high buck hunt, which opens a number of wilderness areas to modern firearms hunters. At the other end of the calendar, a handful of extended archery seasons allow hunting through December. It’s true that any Washington resident who cannot find a deer hunting situation to their liking simply isn’t looking.In addition to wide-ranging hunting options, Washington rifle, archery and blackpowder deer hunters also enjoy some of the simplest hunting regulations in the West. It is still possible to purchase a general-season deer license over the counter, and except for a handful of units, a hunter can choose to hunt any region of the state in any given year.