Maybe he should charge the cattle operator more.Familiar with a LO in nm, 100% of his tags are used on his property. He leases his ranch to a cattle operator in the summer for $7500 for 2000 acres. Had 3 groups of hunters, 5 days each group, 4/group. Total revenue from hunting 54k.
Barely covering costs, wants to leave to his children, eliminate LO tags, he is out of business and who is going to buy 2000acres for the cattle revenue. This business paradox exists throughout the state, suspect politically its a heavy lift to eliminate. Doubt the state wants to pay depredation damages to landowners in lieu of permits. As others have said, other alternative is shoot and let lay.
NM is a fence out state. You have to build fences to keep cattle off your property if they're coming into your land.
Landowners can fence out elk if they are too much of a nuisance for a three month summer cattle operation on 2k acres.
I believe the system needs to be reevaluated. 2,000 acres with ranch only tags is a lot different than 1 acre properties getting unit wide tags.
I don't see the big ranches being as big of a problem for number of tags than a lot of small properties getting them
Tax breaks or some other incentive to provide habit tag should be enough for small properties.
Big ranches should be approached differently.