Free: Contests & Raffles.
If you were arguing for the other side you could counter that by saying that if someone was going to pay that much for the multi season tag, then they probably are more likely to be a dedicated hunter and not one of those guys that buys their lisence and a box of shells the day before season. Therefore they were probably more likely to be successful, whether they had the MS tag or not. Which could explain the higher success rate....
Quote from: grundy53 on November 30, 2011, 08:53:09 PMIf you were arguing for the other side you could counter that by saying that if someone was going to pay that much for the multi season tag, then they probably are more likely to be a dedicated hunter and not one of those guys that buys their lisence and a box of shells the day before season. Therefore they were probably more likely to be successful, whether they had the MS tag or not. Which could explain the higher success rate....So only dedicated hunters apply for multi season tags? I guess we will never know whether the guys that draw and buy multi season tags are a different caliber of hunter than the general public. Maybe they have better than average harvest rates and kill a deer every other year without the multi tag. The argument could be the other way and that these guys want to increase their odds with a multiseason permit because they are less than average. The only thing we know for certain is that harvest success rate goes up for those that buy these tags. Which is the whole point of the tags after all.
I'm not talking about the people that apply. I'm talking about the people that actually pay the $180.00 dollars for the tag (not to mention buy/ borrow a rifle, bow and/or muzzleloader. Plus ammo/arrows). For most people that's quite a bit of money to spend on one in state tag. Stands to reason that if you were not very dedicated then you wuldn't spend that much money when you could just by a normal tag for a fraction of the price. This is just another one of those devisive issues. If you have your mind set one way then your probably not going to be swayed the other way. Personally I could care less if they have a MS tag or not. I'm just making an argument to refute WDFW's irrifutable statistics...
I see the only reason given for the increase in tags is that it "expands opportunity for deer and elk hunters". Boy you'd think they'd come up with something a little more convincing than that.