Free: Contests & Raffles.
he came up with a new name..
Sitka is dead wrong to say that killing wolves does not work. It already did when they were removed. What is correct is without proper management the animals starve. If hunting them is not allowed then yes, they overpopulate and die in winters, disease, and other ways.
There are things that will affect your ability to hunt in the future way more than wolves. The biggest in my opinion is access.
Quote from: Wenatcheejay on January 11, 2012, 09:21:48 PMSitka is dead wrong to say that killing wolves does not work. It already did when they were removed. What is correct is without proper management the animals starve. If hunting them is not allowed then yes, they overpopulate and die in winters, disease, and other ways.You'd be surprised that I agree with you, but not in the way you'd like perhaps. This whole thread was started to point out that wolves aren't the end of hunting or even the downfall of hunting. I have never said not to manage them and control them. Killing wolves can give a pop to your herds, but it isn't the long term solution. Good habitat is. We manage all the other animals we have, why do you believe we can't manage wolves? Many hunters now days seem to want 100% success. THAT isn't possible. What is possible is to figure out what long term carrying capacity is and try to stay in that range and prevent the big highs and the little lows. That won't be a static number as the landscape changes. The best we can do as hunters is to see that managers stay on top of things. There are things that will affect your ability to hunt in the future way more than wolves. The biggest in my opinion is access.
Quote from: Sitka_Blacktail on January 12, 2012, 10:38:33 PMThere are things that will affect your ability to hunt in the future way more than wolves. The biggest in my opinion is access.Are you suggesting that access has anything to do with elk hunting declining sharply in the Lolo, the Payette, the bitterroot, the St Joe, the north fork clearwater, the salmon, elk city, the selway, the thouroughfare, and the late gardner hunts have been completely eliminated?
Quote from: bearpaw on January 13, 2012, 12:23:34 AMQuote from: Sitka_Blacktail on January 12, 2012, 10:38:33 PMThere are things that will affect your ability to hunt in the future way more than wolves. The biggest in my opinion is access.Are you suggesting that access has anything to do with elk hunting declining sharply in the Lolo, the Payette, the bitterroot, the St Joe, the north fork clearwater, the salmon, elk city, the selway, the thouroughfare, and the late gardner hunts have been completely eliminated? Nope. I'm suggesting that access to a place to hunt will be a bigger problem than wolves. Wolves didn't change most of the Copalis unit to lease hunting. Rayonier did. Wolves didn't cause urban sprawl or put up no trespassing or no hunting signs. People did. There are large chunks of land I've hunted since I was a boy that aren't accessible to me any more. The wolves didn't do that.
Nope. I'm suggesting that access to a place to hunt will be a bigger problem than wolves. Wolves didn't change most of the Copalis unit to lease hunting. Rayonier did. Wolves didn't cause urban sprawl or put up no trespassing or no hunting signs. People did. There are large chunks of land I've hunted since I was a boy that aren't accessible to me any more. The wolves didn't do that.
So those that can afford to lease will become the better hunters?
Quote from: dreamunelk on January 14, 2012, 12:43:58 PMSo those that can afford to lease will become the better hunters?Thanks for misinterpreting. That's not my implication. Those that can afford leases/guides/etc are likely to be more successful. If anything, you could argue the exact opposite of your assumption of what I said. Think about it....if you hunt an area where all the displaced hunters are sent and can still be successful amid more competition for fewer and fewer animals.I can't afford a lease, but know a few that can...and when the opportunity comes around my area if things aren't getting better, would probably buy into one. Most cases still cheaper than going out of state on a guided hunt.