1. I think it's hard to judge management strategies strictly on bucks/big bucks, they are really dependent on habitat. I think the ultimate management strategy gives reasonable, and different, opportunities. That means a mix of LE, OTC, and species (WT and MD), if applicable.@robby denning If I’m hijacking this thread, feel free to delete this post.
@cgasner1 @S.Clancy
After listening to the HT podcast and doing some thinking about Rokcast episodes on this general topic, here’s some thoughts/concerns.
1. What management strategy IS working? My main concern is that there's NO management strategy that seems to be working and still providing good opportunity. Other states have been WAY more proactive than MT, and still seem to have a problem. Maybe not to the same degree as we do, but it seems headed in that direction. I noticed that every proposal for MT was taken from other states management. So in theory, they would yield the same results. I'm not seeing any model states for management. As in, which state or unit is doing things in such a way that most hunters can point to it and say "that's what I want my buck hunting to look like" What’s the definition of insanity? Doing the same thing over and over but expecting different results…If all the MT proposals are copying other states, none of which have had good results, what are we doing here?
2. Utah MIGHT be onto something. At least they’re trying something different. I think about the heyday of the 60s. Rut hunting with very limited gear/effective range. People saw the big deer in those days BUT there was way more to it than just the limited weapons. See next paragraph
3. Don’t want to be doomsday, BUT, can’t help but notice a macro trend here. If a wide range of management strategies across the west are broadly failing to produce satisfactory results, what are we looking at? As Robby has pointed out over and over, the people/organizations that get serious about mule deer seem to all eventually come to the same conclusions. Want more/bigger deer? Create more/better habitat. Winter range carrying capacity on a bad winter year is what manages deer numbers across the west. The studies in the western WY deer herd support this as well. Good habitat yields healthy does, which yields healthy bucks and more twins, which then have maximized potential for antler growth. That being said, is that the macro trend we’re seeing all across the west? If it’s a habitat issue due to macro environmental changes, combined with urban expansion, we might be trying to stop something inevitable. Think about journals of Lewis and Clark. They saw very few mule deer. Bighorn sheep everywhere. Disease, climate and habitat change, ect definitely drives macro trends that we just can’t see in any one lifetime of hunting.
4. Robby or @Travis Hobbs or anybody else: is there anywhere currently in the west that you personally see as having an optimal mix of opportunity and buck quality? Something to use as a management case study? Can we even significantly move the needle in a long term fashion with management? Give me some hope!
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2. The "good ol days" of UT were 8-10 bucks:doe. There is a bunch of confounding variables and biases with any states "good old days", not to mention there is very little data from those tine periods. Remember, in the "good ol days" vehicles were much less reliable than now, so there were big swaths of sanctuary areas. Not to mention ATVs, UTVs, motorcycles, shitty weapons, shitty gear (wool pants anyone?), no rangefinders, etc etc etc. these factors are all contributing.
3. I don't think any reasonable person is gonna argue that habitat is king. Unfortunately, it takes fed, state, non-profits, energy extraction, housing, etc to all get together to make noticeable changes. Unless we just stop fighting wildfires in the West, that would do it.
4. From my perspective, I think AZ does a really good job of managing deer hunting. As a NR, I could hunt deer (couse or MD) in Arizona every year, in a variety of seasons. They are also more proactive in adjusting things do to perceived pressure (OTC harvest quotas now), increasing tags quickly when herds boom, etc.