- Banned
- #21
Land owners could solve the problem with high fences.
This thread is getting side tracked from the original questions of why spike only tags
It seems that question has been answered.
My guess is to keep the bull/cow ratio where they want it.
Just so you know le units ( spike only units) are managed for age class bulls not bull to cow ratios.
Land owners could solve the problem by allowing access. I don't believe in forcing access but I don't think they should get any relief from the animals damage when they deny access either. If the elk bunch up on private land because the owners will not allow access then too bad their fences get trashed and their expensive cattle feed and graze gets eaten. I certainly don't want our game departments to encourage pay to play and the turning of hunting into a rich mans sport. I'm not 100% sure this is the case here but it's a common problem.
So much bad information in this post I don't even know where to start. The guy I work for is on that committee, and I can tell you from getting first-hand information from him that cow numbers aren't down in those units. The hunting pressure is driving them onto the CWMU's where they aren't getting shot. CWMU owners are complaining about high cow numbers on their lands, but aren't allowing hunters in to shoot them. They are trying to get more cow tags issued for the CWMUs so as to create pressure on them to force some of them back onto the public ground. Aerial surveys have born this out, these aren't "estimates" these are freaking elk they have seen and counted. I know quite a few of the DNR guys and gals from doing deer trapping with them over this past winter and spring. We had some lengthy discussions on this very subject. 90% of the gun hunters won't, or don't, walk more than a couple hundred yards from the road. If they don't see them from the truck, they aren't there. That's sad, but it's true. Think of how many lazy hunters you know. Main reason they called for a drop in cow tags is to keep them from pushing onto the CWMUs where they aren't being hunted, not from a drastic drop in cow populations.
On a positive note,(and to not sway post further)
a person can hunt spikes on a unit to learn the area and elk habits while they are applying for a LE tag. Once drawn, they now have experience on the unit. Or if they are not finding the quality of elk they want, cant hunt on other units to find one you like and put in for that area for LE.
I put in for a spike only hunt in Oregon as my second choice, knowing that I wouldn't draw my first choice but would mostly likely get the under-subscribed spike tag and be able to hunt in a limited entry unit with good elk numbers while earning a point. I've seen plenty of mature bulls in this unit and my hunting mentor has put a couple on his wall. I'm happy to shoot a spike bull for the freezer; that's a lot of prime meat.
Top tier units are putting out right around 100 tags combining archery any weapon and muzzle loader seasons. Divided in half that's 50 tags in the random draw that makes for some shifty odds. Plus side is almost a life time of spikes and knowing a unit really well