Free: Contests & Raffles.
Actually they should replace any shells they destroy right then and there. That would really piss me off to have a game warden cutting open my shotgun shells.
I would feel the same way if a game warden cut open my shells. That is BS.Does anyone know the name of the study they are basing this regulation change on? Was the study actually done in Washington?
Quote from: bowhuntin on January 30, 2009, 05:32:06 PMI would feel the same way if a game warden cut open my shells. That is BS.Does anyone know the name of the study they are basing this regulation change on? Was the study actually done in Washington?Pretty difficult to study condors in WA we don't have any A ton of the research on condors has been done in Boise Idaho at the raptor center where they raise and flight train condors for release programs. Along with supposedly rehabbing injured raptors (wasn't the case when we had a Kestrel in need, thanks to a falconer we got her some help).I am still wondering why lead in shot and bullets is more impacting than road runoff seems to me there is a hell of a lot more lead produced by the millions of cars driving 24/7 I do get the direct ingestion issue from gutpiles but have always wondered do bullets really blow apart into millions of tiny bits? If so why do bullets in those CSI type shows always remain whole? Have any of the hunters here ever recovered a bullet when cleaning an animal....I end up helping my son pick steel out of birds when packaging.....so many unanswered questions and I gotta go to work
Sunday, November 9, noonDedication of California Condor Bronze SculpturePort of Ilwaco Covered PavilionA life-sized replica of a California Condor, sculpted by nationally-known artist Bart Kenworthy, has been erected as a tribute to the Lewis & Clark Expedition which found a “vulture of the large kind’ on November 18, 1805. The bird, with its 9-foot wing span, was among specimens sent to President Thomas Jefferson. Commissioned by Pacific County Friends of Lewis & Clark, the Condor is posed on the ribs of a whale and both are attached to a basalt rock weighing 40,000 pounds.