FairWeather
Well-known member
TL;DR - How can we all be better, more proactive, conservationists as sportsmen?
I am interested (and maybe some of you are too) in how I can be a more active/proactive conservationist.
I have taken part in a few organized habitat clean ups, and have cleaned up a few spots on my own, but in the grand scheme that doesn’t help much.
There’s the money I spend in PR funds, licenses, tags, etc. that go towards funding conservation work, but that’s completely passive. To say paying that makes me a conservationist is taking some liberties with the definition, I feel.
Last night I heard someone speak at a public comment meeting with ODFW, and I was both deep impressed and lightly perplexed by their passion for wildlife conservation. This person is a well respected hunter and owner of an archery shop. They were really laying into the ODFW rep about the season dates for this year’s general season (among other things), which due to the way the days of the month fall is going into the rut. They also had strong opinions about the change a few years back to change buck season to any visible antler, rather than fork or better.
To me, not yet having found success in the deer woods, both of these are things that have been a source of optimism leading into this fall. Hope that perhaps this year I will finally get on a buck, even if it is just a spike. Now, I’m questioning the ethics of it. It would help me, yes…but it also helps everyone else, and that distinctly does no favors to the deer population. If I’ve had this hard of a time finding the deer BEFORE this season, how much more difficult will it be in the years to follow?
Should I personally opt to not hunt the rut, even if it means eating my tag? Likely no one else will. Classic tragedy of the commons.
Accepting, and advocating for, that harder to fill tag/season for the trade off of healthy populations in the future, that seems like more impactful conservation to me. Doing so loudly and visibly, I imagine, would also help to improve the public perception of hunters on the whole as well. It’s too late for this year, but not too late to potentially influence next year.
I’m not meaning to insinuate that this work/action isn’t being done nationwide, merely that perhaps it isn’t in the public eye as much as less flattering depictions of hunters.
My ultimate question is: What are some ways you all have found to be an effective conservationist, and what impact have you noticed?
I am interested (and maybe some of you are too) in how I can be a more active/proactive conservationist.
I have taken part in a few organized habitat clean ups, and have cleaned up a few spots on my own, but in the grand scheme that doesn’t help much.
There’s the money I spend in PR funds, licenses, tags, etc. that go towards funding conservation work, but that’s completely passive. To say paying that makes me a conservationist is taking some liberties with the definition, I feel.
Last night I heard someone speak at a public comment meeting with ODFW, and I was both deep impressed and lightly perplexed by their passion for wildlife conservation. This person is a well respected hunter and owner of an archery shop. They were really laying into the ODFW rep about the season dates for this year’s general season (among other things), which due to the way the days of the month fall is going into the rut. They also had strong opinions about the change a few years back to change buck season to any visible antler, rather than fork or better.
To me, not yet having found success in the deer woods, both of these are things that have been a source of optimism leading into this fall. Hope that perhaps this year I will finally get on a buck, even if it is just a spike. Now, I’m questioning the ethics of it. It would help me, yes…but it also helps everyone else, and that distinctly does no favors to the deer population. If I’ve had this hard of a time finding the deer BEFORE this season, how much more difficult will it be in the years to follow?
Should I personally opt to not hunt the rut, even if it means eating my tag? Likely no one else will. Classic tragedy of the commons.
Accepting, and advocating for, that harder to fill tag/season for the trade off of healthy populations in the future, that seems like more impactful conservation to me. Doing so loudly and visibly, I imagine, would also help to improve the public perception of hunters on the whole as well. It’s too late for this year, but not too late to potentially influence next year.
I’m not meaning to insinuate that this work/action isn’t being done nationwide, merely that perhaps it isn’t in the public eye as much as less flattering depictions of hunters.
My ultimate question is: What are some ways you all have found to be an effective conservationist, and what impact have you noticed?