ColeyG
WKR
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2017
- Messages
- 387
For the last two years I feel like I been having a lot more of the "hard winters," "too much predation," and "overharvest" type conversations when talking about the state of the Dall sheep population here in AK.
In years past it seems like these topics come up and after and are often thrown around when folks have had a hard hunt or didn't find rams in places where they have been found in the past etc.
From year to year for the last decade or two at least, sheep harvests statewide have been fairly static. The numbers aren't final for the 2021 season, but from what I have heard we are on track for the lowest # of sheep harvested since the 1960s at about half of what the rolling average has been. Hunting pressure or hunter effort on the other hand, seems to have remained about the same.
Personally, my partners and I are zero for the last three sheep hunts, two hunts in 2020 and one in 2021, with approximately 30 days spent in sheep country on those trips combined.
My primary concern is not that neither my partner nor I have killed a ram in the last two years, it is that we've only seen one legal ram on these trips combined. In each case, these hunts were in places where we have fairly long history and experience and so we have a good idea of what baseline "normal" is for both sheep populations and numbers of mature rams. Based on my observations from the last two years I'd say that the sheep populations in the four GMUs I frequent are down by at least 50% if not more.
Another, what I would consider unusual observation from the last two seasons is that I feel like I've been seeing quite a few immature rams on their own rather than hanging in bachelor groups like I'd expect. Lamb recruitment this years seems quite good so that is positive.
I've been hearing lots of other third party reports and complaints like the unusually high number of sub-legal sheep and very young rams taken this year, dismal populations surveys in places like the TMA, guides pulling clients out of one range and heading into another due to lack of sheep, people and planes everywhere, etc.
So if anyone is interested, I'd be curious to hear what people's real-world observations were from the past year or two based on what you have seen in seasons past in the same or similar areas.
Congrats to those that succeeded this year and to those that didn't, hopefully your travels in the mountains made for some memorable experiences.
Cheers.
In years past it seems like these topics come up and after and are often thrown around when folks have had a hard hunt or didn't find rams in places where they have been found in the past etc.
From year to year for the last decade or two at least, sheep harvests statewide have been fairly static. The numbers aren't final for the 2021 season, but from what I have heard we are on track for the lowest # of sheep harvested since the 1960s at about half of what the rolling average has been. Hunting pressure or hunter effort on the other hand, seems to have remained about the same.
Personally, my partners and I are zero for the last three sheep hunts, two hunts in 2020 and one in 2021, with approximately 30 days spent in sheep country on those trips combined.
My primary concern is not that neither my partner nor I have killed a ram in the last two years, it is that we've only seen one legal ram on these trips combined. In each case, these hunts were in places where we have fairly long history and experience and so we have a good idea of what baseline "normal" is for both sheep populations and numbers of mature rams. Based on my observations from the last two years I'd say that the sheep populations in the four GMUs I frequent are down by at least 50% if not more.
Another, what I would consider unusual observation from the last two seasons is that I feel like I've been seeing quite a few immature rams on their own rather than hanging in bachelor groups like I'd expect. Lamb recruitment this years seems quite good so that is positive.
I've been hearing lots of other third party reports and complaints like the unusually high number of sub-legal sheep and very young rams taken this year, dismal populations surveys in places like the TMA, guides pulling clients out of one range and heading into another due to lack of sheep, people and planes everywhere, etc.
So if anyone is interested, I'd be curious to hear what people's real-world observations were from the past year or two based on what you have seen in seasons past in the same or similar areas.
Congrats to those that succeeded this year and to those that didn't, hopefully your travels in the mountains made for some memorable experiences.
Cheers.