Rifleman86
WKR
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2018
- Messages
- 1,268
I remember the first time I hunted the west I felt completely overwhelmed and lost looking at the regs and feeling like I needed a law degree to understand the application process.
But I broke it all down, and without the help of GOHUNT or YouTube still managed to figure it out. Once I figured it out, I realized it wasn’t as complicated as it looked like at first glance.
Since then, through a failed first year in the elk woods, countless hours of research on state game websites, reading studies on things like elk behavior, I’ve had pretty successful seasons year after year.
Some of you remember my “bad hunting partner” thread, about the guy that was a bit of a train wreck the first year then decided to go rogue and invite his buddy without asking, getting him the boot from our trip.
Well talked to him a few weeks ago… He thought the application deadline was the start of the application period. Stupidly I corrected him.
Then I talked to him more recently. He applied, but applied for a tag he was ineligible for.
I literally can’t make the shit up with this guy.
But it brings me to my point. There has to be some level of barrier to entry to western hunting, there just isn’t enough game or land available to let everyone hunt every year. Those barriers can be money, residency, time/points, etc. But no doubt some level of complication in the application process is part of it.
I’m glad it’s complicated. I’m glad it takes months of planning and foresight to apply.
I’ve held folks hands in the past because this stuff brought me so much joy and satisfaction that I felt I needed to share it. But I’ve decided that I’m never doing that again.
Part of the reason I enjoy this stuff is that it took a lot of effort and study to figure it out. Take that away, and it’s not quite as special, and furthermore it just lessens my personal opportunities even more.
Bottom line, keep it complicated. It’s one of the best and fairest barriers to entry. All the others (money, residency, points, etc) are all necessary to a point, but I like the one determined by effort/study the most. Those that are really passionate about it will still figure it out. Those that like the “idea” of it will get distracted and frustrated and move on.
But I broke it all down, and without the help of GOHUNT or YouTube still managed to figure it out. Once I figured it out, I realized it wasn’t as complicated as it looked like at first glance.
Since then, through a failed first year in the elk woods, countless hours of research on state game websites, reading studies on things like elk behavior, I’ve had pretty successful seasons year after year.
Some of you remember my “bad hunting partner” thread, about the guy that was a bit of a train wreck the first year then decided to go rogue and invite his buddy without asking, getting him the boot from our trip.
Well talked to him a few weeks ago… He thought the application deadline was the start of the application period. Stupidly I corrected him.
Then I talked to him more recently. He applied, but applied for a tag he was ineligible for.
I literally can’t make the shit up with this guy.
But it brings me to my point. There has to be some level of barrier to entry to western hunting, there just isn’t enough game or land available to let everyone hunt every year. Those barriers can be money, residency, time/points, etc. But no doubt some level of complication in the application process is part of it.
I’m glad it’s complicated. I’m glad it takes months of planning and foresight to apply.
I’ve held folks hands in the past because this stuff brought me so much joy and satisfaction that I felt I needed to share it. But I’ve decided that I’m never doing that again.
Part of the reason I enjoy this stuff is that it took a lot of effort and study to figure it out. Take that away, and it’s not quite as special, and furthermore it just lessens my personal opportunities even more.
Bottom line, keep it complicated. It’s one of the best and fairest barriers to entry. All the others (money, residency, points, etc) are all necessary to a point, but I like the one determined by effort/study the most. Those that are really passionate about it will still figure it out. Those that like the “idea” of it will get distracted and frustrated and move on.