sndmn11
WKR
The Montana LO bill thread sparked my wonderment.
I just assumed what CO does is pretty close to the norm.
-LO draws separately and in addition to the regular
-Transferable vouchers
-LO preference points
-Ownership requirement of 160 contiguous acres within the unit
-Application quantity increases on a tiered scale with land amount
-Restricted (private land only NOT the LO's land only->any private) and Unrestricted (hunt code wide)
What I am learning is that doesn't seem to be the case. Now I am curious about what your state does for landowner licenses. I could look it up, and kill a day on the goggles, but I am sure many of you have answers enough to cut that down into a five-minute read.
I just assumed what CO does is pretty close to the norm.
-LO draws separately and in addition to the regular
-Transferable vouchers
-LO preference points
-Ownership requirement of 160 contiguous acres within the unit
-Application quantity increases on a tiered scale with land amount
-Restricted (private land only NOT the LO's land only->any private) and Unrestricted (hunt code wide)
Colorado Parks and Wildlife
Colorado Parks and Wildlife is a nationally recognized leader in conservation, outdoor recreation and wildlife management. The agency manages 42 state parks, all of Colorado's wildlife, more than 300 state wildlife areas and a host of recreational programs. CPW issues hunting and fishing...
cpw.state.co.us
What I am learning is that doesn't seem to be the case. Now I am curious about what your state does for landowner licenses. I could look it up, and kill a day on the goggles, but I am sure many of you have answers enough to cut that down into a five-minute read.