Free: Contests & Raffles.
Although it's hardly scientific, I think as a general rule, if an outfitter (in this case bearpaw) supports a *more* restrictive rule for hunting in their own territory, it is almost certainly a good idea...
How in the hell did we all over look the correlation between the St Helens mud flow ELK heard, and the whitetail of GMU 121 and 117?
Maybe nothing right now, but if someone wants to start using chemical defoliants as a common logging practice there, you might want to be ready to fight it. I'm convinced it's part of the blacktail herd decline.
Quote from: bearpaw on May 12, 2012, 09:38:44 PMAnother thing that I will mention is winter feeding. When we have hard winters that push deer from the mid elevation winter ranges, we need to feed them to help them because humans are occupying far too much of the low elevation winter range. When Washington had larger deer numbers we had a strong feeding effort going on. Now there is less winter range and our managers don't want to feed. The managers don't want to rely on feeding programs because it concentrates too many animals in too small of areas. The result can be catastrophic if disease gets started. It can also cause problems with animal/auto collisions and concentrates animals for predators, both 4 & 2 legged. It also gets animals used to handouts instead of learning to forage on their own. Good habitat and spread out herds is good, feeding programs are a sign of problems in the surrounding habitat. They can actually exacerbate the problem at hand. A good example is the St Helens elk herd. Remember a few years back when whole herds of animals were tipping over and dying? They had a winter feeding program there, but the problem actually started in the summer range. The animals were getting to their winter range in near starving condition. So it really didn't make sense to feed them in the winter to keep more of them alive to further overcrowd and degrade the summer range even more. I'll see if I can find the link to that study again.
Another thing that I will mention is winter feeding. When we have hard winters that push deer from the mid elevation winter ranges, we need to feed them to help them because humans are occupying far too much of the low elevation winter range. When Washington had larger deer numbers we had a strong feeding effort going on. Now there is less winter range and our managers don't want to feed.
Quote Maybe nothing right now, but if someone wants to start using chemical defoliants as a common logging practice there, you might want to be ready to fight it. I'm convinced it's part of the blacktail herd decline.There's no doubt in my mind that that's one of the biggest reasons for the decrease in the number of blacktail deer.