Dos Perros
WKR
First week of October is my favorite week to archery hunt because most everyone has killed or thrown in the towel by then. I think eliminating that time period would only serve to consolidate pressure, not distribute it.
I mean, not really a "cap". A cap would be that B-tag allocation was limited for NR to 15% of B tags. I don't think the personal cap is going to do anything pressure wise.B tags are capped this year.
1 if didn't draw general.
2 if drew General
deer license sales have been stagnant for awhile, 5-10 yrs.
Only Deer A and Elk A are statutorily capped, but FWP has got around that with Come-Home to Hunt and others.
B-tags have no cap and represent an enormous increase in NR pressure.
I was just clarifying that resident pressure hasn't been increasing, while there has been a steady increase of NR.From a management perspective, it doesn’t matter where the person resides who kills an antlerless ungulate. A dead doe or cow elk can’t have a fawn or calf in the spring, no matter who pulled the trigger.
Again, it’s not nonresidents fault that your FWP knows they make exponentially more money from a NR pulling the trigger than a resident.
Your FWP is going to make their nut one way or another. They’re not going to cut any expected revenue stream without having a plan to replace (and likely exceed it). Be careful what you wish for.
If you all really do in fact want less antlerless deer and elk killed, ask for that specifically. Blindly calling to cut the NR opportunity isn’t serving to address the actual problem, and it will ultimately hit someone else in their wallet that likely had little or nothing to do with it in the first place.
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From a management perspective, it doesn’t matter where the person resides who kills an antlerless ungulate. A dead doe or cow elk can’t have a fawn or calf in the spring, no matter who pulled the trigger.
Again, it’s not nonresidents fault that your FWP knows they make exponentially more money from a NR pulling the trigger than a resident.
Your FWP is going to make their nut one way or another. They’re not going to cut any expected revenue stream without having a plan to replace (and likely exceed it). Be careful what you wish for.
If you all really do in fact want less antlerless deer and elk killed, ask for that specifically. Blindly calling to cut the NR opportunity isn’t serving to address the actual problem, and it will ultimately hit someone else in their wallet that likely had little or nothing to do with it in the first place.
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True.I mean, not really a "cap". A cap would be that B-tag allocation was limited for NR to 15% of B tags. I don't think the personal cap is going to do anything pressure wise.
My concern is the boys over at Hunt talk really like the Colorado seasons. They have been talking about shorter seasons for a number of years. I really don't trust anything they would come up with.
I saw plenty trucks when I hunted Montana, funny thing is they all had Montana tags, but maybe they were rentalsResidents might have a chance before our honey holes get raped by droves of non residents.
I think any state where farmer/ranchers are getting any money for damages should have to allow hunter access to receive funds.I think for every 10k a rancher gets for damage.
They should have to let a hunter on said property until they are successful for the season closes.
Don't wanna let any hunters on.
No money.
Why would you like separate seasons if you're mostly meat hunting?I do like that point of decoupling seasons. It is easy to get caught up in that mindset in the field admittedly. But my family is mostly meat hunting as we eat 100% wild game all year.
You are 100% correct about going to regions and unlimited permits in the 90s. I went to a couple of those meetings too. Funny thing is, they kept that management strategy for over 20yrs and it never worked. They got hooked on the $5 app fee of the unlimited permits. It wasn’t THAT long ago that we couldn’t sell out the nonresident license quota!!As a native Montana resident I have a few thoughts about this. Change is inevitable and needs to happen. The single region designation isn’t a new trick. It was done for mule deer in the late nineties. I’m not sure how well it worked because I was in high school at the time. Maybe @mtwarden can chime in. I do think that getting rid of the non resident combo for mule deer and elk would help mule deer populations. I do think limiting opportunities to hunt mule deer in the rut would help greatly and I think that we need to consider a Nov 1 or Nov 5 as a start date for the rut. I also think that we either need to get rid of the 16k non resident tag cap or treat it fairly and consider the non resident B tag opportunities, come home to hunt programs, college student programs, and other loopholes and put a cap on those. As a native I’ve decided to make less money and stay in Montana for the hunting opportunities and have seen childhood friends move out of state and make more money and now have less of a disadvantage as far as being able to get tags, etc. I very much like the language about cow elk opportunities on private be public. Take the unit with the state prison for example. The cow elk b tag has some of the better drawing statistics in the state and the elk are above objective. I suspect that the biologists use this elk herd in their count as well as elk on a large private ranch that doesn’t care about having elk eating their alfalfa because they have a large dude ranch style business plan and guests like to see the elk on their property. I believe that there are elk that spend their life on those two properties alone and there are very little cow elk that live on the public lands. I’m not sure if this is the solution or if I would like it, but it is better than some things I can think of and I think it is good that they are considering and realizing that there is a problem
Because I understand I'm not the only person that hunts in Montana. And a healthier mule deer herd ultimately means better opportunities for everyone.Why would you like separate seasons if you're mostly meat hunting?
I'd think most hunters (R & NR) that aren't primarily trophy hunting would favor concurrent seasons to increase opportunity.
Colorado's archery seasons are concurrent and it's nice to have both tags in your pocket. I planned to look for mule deer the day I killed my elk this year and shot my mule deer while trying to get my wife an elk.
Decoupling them would definitely reduce harvest.