It would be better to have 50% fewer elk than to private wildlife. That's a fact......if you want hunting to be affordable for all.
I’m lost, please explain.
Are you saying all of our public lands are going to be sold off if there’s land owner tags?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It would be better to have 50% fewer elk than to private wildlife. That's a fact......if you want hunting to be affordable for all.
Google The Kings Game.I’m lost, please explain.
Are you saying all of our public lands are going to be sold off if there’s land owner tags?
Google The Kings Game.
Someone always has more money. Take a look at the price of elk landowner tags since inception. No one would have dreamed those tags would be worth 20k, 30k etc. In the not so far future (20 years,50 years, etc.) those tags hit 100k. There is no end to who has more money.
Money makes decisions/runs government. That 6% NR allotment is vulnerable if Landowners start pressuring government for more tags/profit. Next thing you know those resident tags are vulnerable....because it is just too much money to waste good tags on the public.
NOTHING is worse for public elk hunting than privatized for profit elk licenses.
History has shown us how this plays out. We should avoid this terrible mistake.
I would caution verification there. AZ and NM don’t have the cattle ranching issues that Idaho, Montana do. In those states issues arise mostly because of the high number of predators and less quality habitat on public lands surrounding the ranches. Some posters here want to make it look like more of a problem than it is to keep landowner tags in NM. Also, there is an anti-hunting agenda to stop cattle grazing on public lands in Arizona.I wasn’t aware of that! Thank you for sharing! That seals the deal and definitely knocks down AZ below NM in my book
Do you think that private property signs will burned in the street and we’ll all get access? Or maybe Gila will get so rich as the paid spokesman for infinite outdoors he’ll buy the Great Western and let us all hunt for free?
I would caution verification there. AZ and NM don’t have the cattle ranching issues that Idaho, Montana do. In those states issues arise mostly because of the high number of predators and less quality habitat on public lands surrounding the ranches. Some posters here want to make it look like more of a problem than it is to keep landowner tags in NM. Also, there is an anti-hunting agenda to stop cattle grazing on public lands in Arizona.
There is good hunting on some cattle grazing leases within the National Forests, simply because the habitat is very good. Giving landowners big game tags instead of helping out with predation in other ways is at the expense of our resident hunting opportunity. The fact is the Jennings law referenced is about giving power to the Game Commission to come up with ways to mitigate predation on private lands. To suggest that a rancher can just slaughter any game animal that jumps the fence is ridiculous. The reason why they are hitting on AZ is because there was a public comment made at the last NM game commission meeting to take a look at the AZ public draw system.
You will find that the non-resident land owners, members of hunt clubs and non-resident outfitters are the ones that support landowner tags in New Mexico. They want to continue to come here and sell off our wildlife for their own gain. History teaches us that every time hunting has been privatized the wildlife loses. Residents only agenda is to draw a big game tag and hunt.


Your opinion that something is a fact, does not make it so.It would be better to have 50% fewer elk than to private wildlife. That's a fact
That is an absurdly uninformed or purposely deceitful summary take to have. Most of the total elk tags land in nonres hands because the state provitizes most tags that end up sold to the highest bidder (wealthy nonresidents). This is a FACT.lol guess the 6% of tags we non guided non res get is too much
The last time a ranch tried leverage their access compact with AZGFD over land owner antelope tags, AZGFD just cancelled all hunts in that unit and told the ranch to enjoy their antelope. Don’t kill any. The compromise on the Big Bo for elk was to let the the Ranch( owned by the Navajo reservation) set some ground rules with access times, cameras, hunting around tanks and road access, and charge a small fee. After the 19b issue with antelope, the Big Bo knew if they pressed for landowner tags, game and fish would just cancel the hunts, or cut the tags, and tell them to enjoy their elk. Don’t kill any..The ranch is a very large part of unit 10, pretty small public area left to hunt elk on. There’s only a few ranches that would benefit from LO tags, unless you count the stupid little 40 acre ranchetts. Hunters in Arizona overwhelmingly oppose LO tags or any Utah style of raffle tags.
I'm not suggesting, it will happen.To suggest that elk would be slaughtered without e-plus is ridiculous. Equally ridiculous is that there should be two distinct universes: private land and public land tags. This is what we hear from the NM outfitters association. The outfitters in New Mexico want to continue to own the big game hunting here when they aren’t even stakeholders. They merely provide services to hunters and a place to sleep. Those services should be voluntary. We could argue it here until the cows come home. It’s really in the ballot box now…We have a gubernatorial race this year and primaries in June. The candidates that have the best solutions for resident hunting will win.
In your home state (if you live in a state that hosts wild elk) would you be OK with a system that privitizes most of the elk resource instead of ensuring most hunt opportunity goes to residents? That EPLUS system for elk in NM is stealing the public's resource that should be in a public draw, not doled out as outfitter welfare.
Sure, as have I (hunted unit wide EPLUS ranches) for drawn tags and you did NOT hunt the RANCH ONLY EPLUS ranches. The whole EPLUS system screws residents and that is WRONG.If it means more populations of huntable elk, then yes.
The units I hunt in Oregon have had serious declines in populations. Non objective people will blame wolves and predators because that's the easy button. Truth is thousands of cows are being slaughtered every winter because big ag interests pushed for unlimited OTC tags and have state statutes written that make getting additional tags as easy as a phone call. Are predators helping, no but they aren't the only factor, just a shiny object to distract people.
I've shot 2 bulls on Eplus open public ground on the tags I have drawn.
Most states do not have that opportunity for access.
There are no questions to answer. I don’t report to you. That bull crap you pontificate is in your own mind!I'm not suggesting, it will happen.
It has happened all across the west for the last 2 decades.
Comparing elk to antelope or deer show's your lack of knowledge. Antelope do not destroy fences, eat 20lbs of feed a day, or raid haystacks.
I'm friends with some major landowners, I have not met one that's not protective of their deer, most of their antelope, but the vast majority add curse words to describe elk.
Do you ever plan on answering any questions or is your plan to continue to bloviate and make stuff up?
There are no questions to answer. I don’t report to you. That bull crap you pontificate is in your own mind!
Sure, as have I (hunted unit wide EPLUS ranches) for drawn tags and you did NOT hunt the RANCH ONLY EPLUS ranches. The whole EPLUS system screws residents and that is WRONG.
It is not that hard to see NM puts most elk tags in the hands of non residents, no matter how some want to selectively look at certain pieces to qualify or excuse it--Most NM elk tags are hunted by nonresidents.
Anybody who thinks that is OK under any supposedly extenuating circumstances or justifications quite simply does not believe residents in each state have a legal right to the large majority of tags before nonresidents get a chance at them.