Steve300xcw
WKR
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2017
- Messages
- 1,063
"and a seven point buck" Why do they say it all stupid like that?
easterners
"and a seven point buck" Why do they say it all stupid like that?
Weapon or firearm? There may be some loopholes depending on which word is used.I asked CPW several years ago if I could hunt these deer. They said "Oh ya, you can hunt them all you want........you just can't legally discharge a weapon in the city limits". SMH
Not to try and defend any actions, but in the spirit of discussion. You should of seen my morals at 22, they sure aren't the same as today.Either not a very moral person, or they are hungry. Assume most are the 1st
I bet you are correct sir....lol I'm sure a lot of us were the same, and it's even worse today.Not to try and defend any actions, but in the spirit of discussion. You should of seen my morals at 22, they sure aren't the same as today.
Thank you for a solid start to my day, I haven't laughed that hard before lunch in a decade.The same way a lot of guys make bad decisions in life…the rack was just too big to pass up
CPW already estimates that there are as many poached animals annually as there are legally harvested. I wonder if that’s mostly folks out in the woods knocking over deer on public, or if a lot of that is private land owners who know they’re never going to get caught on their own property.I used to think it was just degenerates that poached, but I’m starting to wonder when normal upstanding guys who are pissed about how hunting is being affected by anti-hunting legislation, over crowding, wolf introductions, point creep, CPW ignoring their feedback, etc. in states like Colorado are going to start poaching. Little chance of being caught, and quickly diminishing opportunities are probably making some question whether it’s worth playing by the rules at all.
Yeah, the part about telling the landowner that he was going to kill him is where that question derived from.How long before this kid starts killing people instead of animals?
Poaching isn't the same as torturing little animals.
Geez! I hadn’t heard that stat about the ratio of legal to poached animals.CPW already estimates that there are as many poached animals annually as there are legally harvested. I wonder if that’s mostly folks out in the woods knocking over deer on public, or if a lot of that is private land owners who know they’re never going to get caught on their own property.
More deer are killed on the highway in Lincoln, MT than hunters harvest I believe as well.CPW already estimates that there are as many poached animals annually as there are legally harvested. I wonder if that’s mostly folks out in the woods knocking over deer on public, or if a lot of that is private land owners who know they’re never going to get caught on their own property.
I am not surprised. It would be super easy to poach. Too east actually.CPW already estimates that there are as many poached animals annually as there are legally harvested. I wonder if that’s mostly folks out in the woods knocking over deer on public, or if a lot of that is private land owners who know they’re never going to get caught on their own property.
Very nice, but this practice is something that hasn't always been practiced. A buddy back home has a son that is a state game warden (officer?). He tells me quite often of his kid giving needy families/people processed game.In my 24 year career I had exactly one poaching incident that involved killing for eating. Large family and poor.
All of our confiscated game went to meat processor (they ground everything into burger) then it was doled out via the food bank, local rest home etc. We were also able to transfer confiscated game to individuals (with just a short form to fill out). I told them I would get the deer they needed, just quit poaching them. Never had trouble with them again.
The vast majority of poaching basically boiled down to ego, sad but true.