If a pronghorns life is worth $600+then why not push for equal tag prices across the board with your influence in WY, give 90% to residents at NR prices, like you said, it’s worth $600, so elk must also be worth $1100 to you as a resident. Also I doubt the majority of WY residents feel the same way about what the value of their resident wildlife’s life, you would price out all the lower income individuals if you could from what you’ve said and I get a feeling you could careless as long as you get what you want, maybe I’m wrong but you come off that way.
Truthfully the only hunting that’s expensive is NR hunting, resident hunting isn’t jumping fast in cost. Eventually there will be a ceiling people just won’t pay and will stop traveling to hunt, personally I doubt my kids generation continues hunting, it will fade away and be similar to Europe, eventually we’ll see that generation use public lands less with time and they will be sold off, just my assumptions based on the direction our country has been heading the last 20 years. Enjoy it while we can resident or not.
Personally I’ll still pay but just because I can, doesn’t mean another is fortunate enough to. Sad some kids will never get a chance if they don’t live in a state with vast amounts of wildlife, but don’t expect them to also want to fight for public lands in 20 years, they’ll be fine with national parks.
Also the states like WY and MT have a very low population base, they can’t keep public lands public without assistance from NR‘s when it’s up to Washington. The outdoors for today’s youth is in a video game, even if you get 10million hikers a year, that’s a minority of the population. Once the west loses the votes from the Midwest and East public lands will disappear and pushing out NR hunters just makes it that much easier as you’ll lose a voice outside of your area. If you feel NR don’t fight for public lands then why do you recruit members for BHA outside of the west? Why does RMEF have so many members in the Midwest and East coast? Just because people can’t have their feet on the ground doesn’t mean they can provide assistance.
Easy answer, Residents live here all year, watch those pronghorn all year when they're huddled up behind a snow drift in 65 mph winds, migrating through fences, across highways, watch them starve, and appreciate what their lives are...and the value of that.
A vast, vast majority of NR's show up once a year, when pronghorn are in the best physical shape they'll be in, spend a day or three before sending a bullet or arrow through one.
Also, Residents fund nearly all of the NGO wildlife groups here. That funding puts millions of additional dollars into wildlife and on-the-ground projects. Nearly all the volunteer hours (valued at $26/hour) on wildlife work is done by Residents.
From having hunted dozens of times in 10 states as a NR, its much easier to cut a check once a year than what I put into wildlife in the State I live in, both in volunteer time and monetarily.
So, for those reasons, I believe I'm "paying" wayyyyy more $600 for a pronghorns life when I take one in Wyoming. Why I also feel NR's are getting off cheap with a $600 tag. Would be significantly easier and cheaper to just pay $600 for a pronghorn tag.
I also agree with you about public lands and hunting...it will be difficult to maintain long-term, but not as impossible as you make it sound. But, its not because of $600 NR pronghorn tags...to believe that, is as naive as it is ridiculous. Much deeper problems than that and not a rabbit hole I'm willing to head down.
Plenty of people from all over the place advocate for public lands, and I've never said otherwise.
None of which has anything to do with keeping 90% of the tags in the hands of Wyoming residents for the benefit of Wyoming families and their hunting traditions.