Free: Contests & Raffles.
I'm no elk expert that for sure.But one thing I do know is ,and this apply to deer,elk,all game animals really.If you want the herd to grow its all about the cows or females.As long as there is enough bulls to breed all the cows than the herd grows.If you think about genes as long as there are cows in the herd that carry that old bulls genes ,then his genes live on.That's why sometimes it's so important to protect cow,does,females, but when you give out way to many permits or OTC cow tags,poaching,ect,ect, it is possible to erase or completely take out certain genes through female harvest.Just like humans ,whether you have a son or daughter ,your genes are passed on . They may be more prominent from father to son,but make no mistake your genes are passed on son or daughter makes no difference.
I'm gonna say the spike only thing is working.Personally, I hate only being able to hunt spikes, but I'm old enough to remember when you'd go to the big feeding station and maybe see a couple gangly raghorns. But you wouldn't see any real brusier bulls.We didn't have any bull tags this year, but we called in some absolute stud bulls.It wouldn't take long to wipe them out.Also, not that many years ago there were a ton of cow tags on the east side. That wasn't an accident. The herd was above their desired carrying capacity. You can argue what the carrying capacity should be, but unless you're actually working with the farmers and paying the claims and looking at the quality of graze from an educated standpoint..... Well, you're just guessing.I don't see any alternative to what's going on. Going to 3-point min on the east side would kill a LOT of bulls for a couple years, but then we'd be back to almost no big bulls. Personally, I like having the big bulls out there, even if I can only draw a tag every few million years (or at least that's how it feels.)
It's all about money. If the eastside was all open for any bull or 3pt min, there wouldnt be many elk left and they wouldnt make nearly as much money. Special big bull permits make the state hundreds of thousands of dollars every year. Many spikes dont survive the winter anyways and success rate is so low that it doesnt matter if most of them get killed off. Only a few need to make it through to grow big to continue repopulating. At the end of the day, WDFW is out to make money any way they can.
Nearly one quarter of WDFW’s operating budget comes from fishing and hunting license sale revenues. As state General Fund support to the department declines, user fees are more important than ever in helping to avert even deeper cuts to services