Colorado imminent domain for wolves

Oh was there an audience off camera to the left or something and that left table is where folks came up one at a time to speak? The table structure threw me off like it wasn't an open meeting.
 
Oh was there an audience off camera to the left or something and that left table is where folks came up one at a time to speak? The table structure threw me off like it wasn't an open meeting.
There is always an open forum at the end of commission meetings, though I do believe you must sign up to get a chance to speak. In the meeting discussed above, the open forum lasted for over an hour. Anyone can sign up and get 2 minutes in front of the commission, even random out of staters. Prior to the last election, the group behind the mountain lion hunting ban brought in a ton of private citizens from other states to speak for the ban.
 
Had a neighbor running cattle on FS. Lost 34 head on one unit and 19 head on the one nearest me. Dept of Ag killed 11 of the 12 wolves and elk hunting has improved greatly. Indirectly the grazing has solved some wolf issues in Montana. USFWS needs to be greatly modified or elimonated. Maybe then grizzly bears would quit migrating into areas where no habitat exists.
I'm curious if you have any proof to back this up. What unit? Over how many months? How are we sure there were only 12 wolves and wolves were the only issue? Looks like you're in Montana; Montana sure has a lot of grizzly bears.

When you say elk hunting has greatly improved how can you "prove" the quality of hunting improved and it wasn't just that you were stumbling into more elk that year?

How does USFWS being modified or eliminated make grizzlies stop moving into areas without habitat? What determines there being no habitat? Grizzly bears traditionally lived in areas as far south as Mexico. I bet there wasn't any "habitat" there.

Even the federal register tells us that USFWS is the only agency to conserve and manage wild game. Without them there's a good chance that states would privatize the take of wild game and regular 'ol peasants such as you and I wouldn't be able to hunt for the price of a $42.00 tag...

Edit: I just want to make it clear that I am not advocating for the reintroduction of wolves. I am simply bringing forward the point that unfounded claims do nothing in these arguments and your "feelings" mean nothing without something to back them up.
 
Ahh yes, the only solution to the problem we just caused is to further encroach on the rights of our citizens. Convenient.
 
Area 318. I have a ranch in the middle of it. I see the calf crop every year and I hunt every day of the season on horseback.

I met the dept ag hunter a number of years ago and had very informative dicussion.

A number of friends of mine caught the USFWS planting a grizzly a number of years ago that they denied when cornered a week later just like they did when they planted wolves next to my place a number of years ago. When every drainage gets 5 wolves within two weeks - it ain't natural migration. Thank god for the ranchers that killed them on their calving grounds.

My first degree was in wildlife management and I haven't seen anything like that in the last 50 years. More like bucket biology.
 
If we actually were Public landowners we'd have fired the USFWS, USFS and MTFWP
decades ago.
And I bet we'd have more wildlife, better hunting and lots less forest fires.
But we obviously are not.
 
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