Agreed with many of the view points here. Filled out the survey in the same manner. I want to hunt every year here as a resident, in my home state, but i cant deny that some of these OTC units are over crowded. I am willing to pay more to reduce some of this hunting pressure. Does that make me selfish? Maybe. I want to hunt every year in my home state as i said. If that means non-res is going to lose their OTC option? Maybe thats the answer. Maybe i'll pay more to make up the difference. i'm ok with that. It's not that i want to shaft out of state hunters but theres gotta be some perk for living in the state i hunt and the current bombardment of OTC units doesnt feel sustainable to the long term success of the herds in those units.
I'm more curious what race and "gender identity" have to do with a survey on big game license quotas/distribution/points.
Stay woke CPW.
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It's a waste of question space and data they will collect for... no reason. Wasted man power by the state. Doesnt pertain to hunting at all, i'd have rather asked a question about muzzleloader season in the middle of archery season and the safety requirements surrounding that.I'm more curious why people care so much about race/gender questions. Funny how triggered people get over nothing.
Ah, but you failed to answer the question, typical of the left...what does your preferred gender pro-noun have to do with a survey about license quotas and preference points?I'm more curious why people care so much about race/gender questions. Funny how triggered people get over nothing.
I'm generally annoyed by these questions when I get them as well. Thinking a little about it, though, it could be useful information. I don't know how/if they'll use it, but the way I would envision it COULD be useful is if they wanted to see if they're getting opinions from all of the users of their resource. Perhaps they have some basis to know percentage of folks of different race/gender that hunt to compare with. If the folks filling out the survey don't relatively represent these percentages, maybe they'll adjust how they get additional comments to try to capture those users that weren't captured with this survey. SO...I don't think it's necessarily useless in this particular survey.It's a waste of question space and data they will collect for... no reason. Wasted man power by the state. Doesnt pertain to hunting at all, i'd have rather asked a question about muzzleloader season in the middle of archery season and the safety requirements surrounding that.
See Post #48.Ah, but you failed to answer the question, typical of the left...what does your preferred gender pro-noun have to do with a survey about license quotas and preference points?
Not triggered at all, if you can provide me witb a valid reason why it should matter on that survey, I'm all ears.
Ah, but you failed to answer the question, typical of the left...what does your preferred gender pro-noun have to do with a survey about license quotas and preference points?
Not triggered at all, if you can provide me witb a valid reason why it should matter on that survey, I'm all ears.
It's a healthy chunk im sure, dont think anyone is arguing that. Colorado economy is heavily influenced by tourism (hunting, sking, hiking, tree hugging, all of it) so im sure it would have an effect on the local mountain economies. How big that is? No idea, for the fall season im sure its substantial but the amount of people out just taking pictures of aspens changing colors is enormous also (theyre awful purdy no doubt).The resident versus NR points people make are interesting to me. Would love to understand the 'why' on their arguements for or against each side.
Would also love to know the dollars poured into the CO ecomony each fall by the NR OTC crowd. Sure CPW gets their share but so do all the others who service those NRs.
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It's a healthy chunk im sure, dont think anyone is arguing that. Colorado economy is heavily influenced by tourism (hunting, sking, hiking, tree hugging, all of it) so im sure it would have an effect on the local mountain economies. How big that is? No idea, for the fall season im sure its substantial but the amount of people out just taking pictures of aspens changing colors is enormous also (theyre awful purdy no doubt).
#1 California #2 Washington #3 Colorado[1] with regards to tax revenue. Pretty tough to break down R/NR sales for the green stuffI bet more people travel to Colorado every year to visit dispensaries than nonresident OTC hunters. I would also bet they pump 20x more money into the economy than nonresident OTC hunters...
Well if thats the numbers then i expect zero changes from CO. Thats a big chunk of cash and these things are decided by the money. Update to next years hunting plan: Extinguish resident OTC units and up the cost for non-res OTC units but give them full access *haha* ugh.The article is from 2019 but specific to deer and elk licenses it states $38million from NR vs $7.6 million from residents.
Ask MeatEater: Why Do Non-Resident Licenses Cost So Much?
No matter where you live and hunt, you probably dream of pursuing game animals that aren’t available in your home state. Hunting naturally encourages a desire to explore new areas, whether it’s a trip to Montana for elk, Kansas for whitetails or Florida for turkeys. Many hunters manage to make...www.themeateater.com