Free: Contests & Raffles.
Oregon's archery elk seasons starts August 25th this year. Just sayin'.
Maybe the archers should push to have it start on the 8th regardless of the day of the week. It seems it would be simple to have it the 8th-20th every year.Brandon
Actually we had it that way (8-21) for at least six years, not just three years. And yes, the organized Archery Coalition has communicated to the department and the commission asking to have the fourteenth day of the season reinstated and to get rid of the floating start (and once again starting on the 8th) exactly because of the reasons stated on this thread.It wasn't overall success rates that got too high with the Sept 8-21 season. In fact the overall success rates were exactly in line with what resource allocation was supposed to achieve. Rather, what the department hung their hat on as the reason to change our season timing was that bowhunters were better at taking so-called mature bulls (five point or better) than their modern rifle counterparts. Then they cherry picked the statistics they needed to justify a change to the Commission. All this went down after a modern firearms hunter whined that it was unfair that bowhunters were too good at taking decent-sized bulls; instead of bettering himself or perhaps taking up bowhunting he sought change that would affect everyone (sound familiar?). He pointed out that the largest money source is modern firearms (there again is that 'more revenues' carrot dangled in front of the donkey; hey, it works...) and the department swallowed it hook, line and sinker, dug up statistics to back up the claim and the commission bought it. [I say 'dug up' statistics because before this event the department's own definition of a "mature" bull was one that had at least six points per side, and so was usually at least four years old. The complaint spurred them to suddenly include five point bulls in their"mature bull" tallies, animals which can under good antler growth conditions be as young as two years old!][Machias, (I am probably wrong, but) I took Boneaddict's last statement to mean that people spent the time to circulate signature petitions to get a proposed equipment rule change in front of the commission instead of circulating a petition to collect signatures for getting our elk seasons back to the way they were prior to 2009.]
In regards to the whole "too hot" thing, I'm not buying it. Sure if you dilly dally around some of the meat may spoil. I shot my bull this year opening morning 9:00am on the dot. It was hot that day. We jumped the bull twice throughout the day and he was not in good shape, he just wouldn't die. We made the call to pull out and come back in the morning. We found him in the morning and were back at the truck by 12pm headed to the butcher the meat was fine and tastes as good as any elk I've ever eaten.