Red Letters
WKR
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2020
- Messages
- 568
is there anyway to figure out if the guy that passed was a member here? I found him online as having lived in Kingwood, several members here live in that same town.
Its not just muzzleloaders. They allow centerfire rifles during bear season for the entire archery season also? Complete shitshow. But then again we are talking about the agency that allowed the entire state to vote on the wolf issueArchers don't own the woods for the entire month as it's not only "archery season". How arrogant of you, as muzzleloader hunters aren't out there with loaded weapons when it's not their designated season/days. If you don't like it, stay out of the woods during muzzleloader season (you still have the majority if the month) or wear orange and in the meantime, take it up with CPW.
Its not just muzzleloaders. They allow centerfire rifles during bear season for the entire archery season also? Complete shitshow. But then again we are talking about the agency that allowed the entire state to vote on the wolf issue
That’s an interesting misconception, the ‘agency’ allowed the people of Colorado to vote on the wolf issue?Its not just muzzleloaders. They allow centerfire rifles during bear season for the entire archery season also? Complete shitshow. But then again we are talking about the agency that allowed the entire state to vote on the wolf issue
Not sure if he is a member. We crossed paths on the mountain Monday and seemed like a great young man… I stopped by his camp on Wednesday to let him know we were leaving. He had a hunting partner with him and cant imagine what he is going through. They were suppose to be headed home back to Texas today.is there anyway to figure out if the guy that passed was a member here? I found him online as having lived in Kingwood, several members here live in that same town.
Maybe maybe not. But there sure as hell do to other archery hunters. End of the day we accept risks when we hunt. Each of us make a conscious decision on whether or not we want to mitigate any of them.Archers are not putting arrows into gun hunters...you don't understand! There should be complete separation!
There was a Hunter out here from PA a couple of years who built his own cart to fit on the narrow gauge railroad tracks. He was confronted by some RR employees when they rolled up on his jalopy and, according to the employees, he went off on a threatening rampage. Because he was armed, they backed down, left and went back to silverton and got the San Juan county sheriff, who then rode the entire length of the train tracks through the wilderness area and never found him. He also never got on the train itself in the following days. Considering there are only 2 trail exits he could have used: one is 3 miles and 3,000 feet of switchbacks and the other is 5 miles and a couple of thousand feet as well, seems unlikely that he could have escaped with his equipment, but they never found anything.
How do calls or decoys excuse identifying the target?The clear conflict is not guns vs archers but guys hunting the same animal with firearms at the same time when archers generally are using calls and decoys. Doesn't take a lot of common sense to see obvious risks here. Archers should have their elk season, then ML and rifle. I won't carry a deek in CO during ML season, hike out very early and hunt well off the beaten trail to void those smokepole guys.
Copy that. Sounds like from posts below the 5'' rule still stands, though? The unit I hunt has the 4 points or 5'' rule and I thought that extended across CO.Some ML tags are ES. Identifying antler points isn’t needed.
Confirming what you’re shooting at still does tho
The rule is that a bull must have four points or a brow tine of at least five inches, not both.Copy that. Sounds like from posts below the 5'' rule still stands, though? The unit I hunt has the 4 points or 5'' rule and I thought that extended across CO.
Some of you make it sound like this happens routinely. It's an unfortunate tragedy. But these things rarely occur. I don't know how many total hunters and other recreationalists will be in the woods this September but I can pretty well guarantee it's well over 10,000. This is one single incident. I can think of one other a few years ago. That's makes two (that I know of) in eight years.
The fact that a negligent hunter killed another doesn't mean the whole season structure needs to be re-worked.
I'm mostly a bow hunter but I have a rifle bear tag. I'll be out later this week looking for that bear and I'll go back to bowhunting after that. I'm fortunate to spend about half the archery season hunting, and I've never once had any sort of incident with a muzzleloader. There is simply not that conflict that some claim.
Last year there was a guy who was killed by his friend during rifle season. It was the same type of negligence that killed him and there was no season structure to argue over.
I had crosshairs on a bulls shoulder at 240 yds for over a minute 2 years ago waiting for him to move his head from behind a tree so I could verify legality. He never did so he lived. I guess my point is that you need to know not only that you are shooting at an elk but what sort of elk it is
There is no excuse but clearly people today are dumber than ever and if we will print this on a label...we can justify separating archers and muzzleloaders during elk season or at least place em in different units. And when someone does murder a bow hunter...they stay locked up. We choose to hunt with a bow for the challenge and partially so we are less likely to get shot.How do calls or decoys excuse identifying the target?
There is no excuse but clearly people today are dumber than ever and if we will print this on a label...