Hunting Washington Forum
Big Game Hunting => Elk Hunting => Topic started by: nw_bowhunter on October 05, 2008, 09:19:00 AM
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http://www.king5.com/video/environment-index.html?nvid=288143
I took a drive over there during archery season and it was a dead zone, but at night I did start seeing them. The local residents complain about them but the Fish and Game does not seem overly concerned. I think for archery its 3 pt only. Maybe you guys who rifle hunt can put some elk down.
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To many better then to few... I feel for those people tho.
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i know where i want to hunt :tung:
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DAMMMMM dates are wrong for my vacation. :bash: :bash: :bash: :bash:
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The residents complain, but they don't want you hunting there either. Most of the surrounding area is a no shooting zone. Can't shoot in town either. So where do you think the elk are when season rolls around? Not in a shooting zone.
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My parntner and i hunted there 2 years ago on 68 acres of private ground.It was a friend of mines mom's place with no one living there.It backed up nat'l forest land.Anyway we were pumped since my daughter saw elk when she stayed there over the summer.So of course we go there and I didnt see so much as a piece of poo.
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The WDFW would only have to put out a few cow tags to pressure them out of town. Dummies.
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oh the elk are their but the no shooting signs and no hunting signs every where. is just so outsiders don't come and ask about hunting those elk. I have hunted out there in the past on private property and had a lot of upset locals. especially when there is a large "hunting club out there." and they harvest most of the local heard bulls every year. :twocents:
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I hunted the area 3 yrs ago and there were full herds within 50ft of Hwy12 at night and back in the woods during the day.
6X7 bull next to the gas station at night.
Cows browsing so close to the road you were scared to drive over 40mph.
The only herd we busted during hunting hours were down within a mile of the houses, near town.
They seem to know.
This was modern firearm so they'd been 'educated' by bowhunters and muzzleloaders.
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WDFW NEWS RELEASE
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
600 Capitol Way North, Olympia, WA 98501-1091
http://wdfw.wa.gov/
October 6, 2008
Contact: Sandra Jonker, (360) 906-6722
Meeting on proposed elk-hunting rules
scheduled Oct. 17 in Packwood
OLYMPIA - State wildlife officials will attend a public meeting Oct. 17 in Packwood to discuss proposed changes in elk-hunting rules to help control crop damage and other problems caused by foraging elk in the Cowlitz River Valley.
The meeting will begin at 5 p.m. in the Packwood Community Hall.
"We encourage anyone with questions or concerns about proposed changes in local elk-hunting rules to attend this meeting," said Sandra Jonker, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) regional wildlife manager. "This meeting is designed to give people a chance to discuss these proposals directly with department staff."
In developing statewide hunting seasons for 2009-11, WDFW proposed two possible changes in elk-hunting rules designed to address increasing complaints about elk damage in the Cowlitz River Valley, Jonker said.
Good forage in the valleys below the hills of the Gifford Pinchot National Forests draw large numbers of elk into the area, especially during hard winters, she said.
One proposal would create a new special-permit hunting area one mile from either side of U.S. Highway 12 from Morton to Packwood. The other would allow hunting of cow elk - rather than just branched antler bulls - during the general hunting season in the Davis Lake Valley.
"These changes are being proposed primarily as a way to reduce property damage and other elk-related problems in the area," Jonker said. "Hunters would undoubtedly take some additional elk, but these proposals aren’t designed to reduce the overall size of the herd. The main goal is to haze animals away from people’s property, and hunters can help do that."
Local no-shooting zones would remain in place and not be affected by the department’s proposals, Jonker said. Hunters also would still be required to observe "No Trespassing" signs and obtain property owners’ permission before hunting on private land.
As a first step in developing a new three-year hunting plan, WDFW sought public comments on new elk-hunting rules for the Cowlitz River Valley and more than 50 other proposals statewide from mid-August through September. During that time, the department held three public meetings in southwest Washington on local and statewide issues.
A second public-comment period is scheduled Jan. 20 through Feb. 5, 2009, after wildlife officials have considered the first round of comments and revised their initial set of proposals. The Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission will then hold a public hearing on WDFW’s final recommendations in March, and take action on hunting rules for 2009-11 in April.
"The upcoming meeting in Packwood provides another opportunity for area residents to comment on proposed elk-hunting rules in the Cowlitz River Valley," Jonker said. "We welcome this chance for a good exchange of ideas on this issue."
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