You are not taking into account that, yes, the NR tag allocation sold out, but a couple thousand of those were purchased by residents as second tags. That's why your stats were off from the 14% number, and, no, it didn't put an extra 1k hunters in the field. NRs don't buy all of their allotment. I'd say a better figure would be between 11-11.5k NR tags being purchased by NR, and even then, some probably bought an extra after Aug 1st as well.I came up with 16% of mule deer hunters in 2018 were non-resident. I agree, that’s a reasonable allocation and percentage to me.
Where I hope this management plan is heading is allowing tag quotas on an individual unit/region basis versus 14k non-res tags state wide. We all know mule deer populations can vary drastically annually based on the winter mortality. Some areas experience high mortality were others might not.
For example, last year non-res tags sold out prior to the general Oct 10th deer hunt opener. This was the first time in a long time and put 1,000+ extra deer hunters out there in a time when numbers are struggling. I’m talking more specifically to eastern and SE Idaho.
The F&G cut some controlled hunts but minimal compared to the added non-residents. The F&G could not control it and that was just how it played out. In my opinion, tag quotas by unit would be a more effective way of managing the quality of deer.
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