I have a buddy who pulled an nr general deer tag for Unit 24 for 2023. I have some familiarity of places like boulder creek, boulder meadows reservoir, and Cruikshank reservoir. Ive done some fishing and mild hiking in those general areas in the fall.
I will be a 6 month+ resident by the time I...
Howdy y'all,
Just moved to Boise recently and a buddy of mine just pulled a nonresident mule tag for GMU 24. I'm somewhat familiar with some fishing holes and hiking trails to the east of McCall, but that's about it. We(I'll have the ability to grab a resident tag by then) plan on hunting in the...
Sadly this would be difficult to track when their system overloads and users panic with refreshes and attempts to try on other devices. The best solution is preventing an overload in the first place. Either increase server capacity, or create a system where not everyone wants to login all at...
This is very similar to what me and my buddies found out just by white tail hunting with 6.5 creedmoore 143 eld-x. They have GREAT expansion on little Texas Deer bodies, but extrapolating that out to big elk would make me concerned about good penetration at range.
that and exotics. there are reports of free ranging Blackbuck, axis, nilgai in certain regions now. an ecological nightmare, but fun nonetheless. Texans have very little clue what it means to maintain populations.
Idaho seems to be a bit of fresh air, REAL hunting rather than shooting pet deer.
Ahh, that makes sense. Thanks for the information. at a surface level, it made sense to my flat terrain Texas mind that they would be mostly cohabitating and competing for resources.
I guess my point was, if Mule deer are under pressure would granting more whitetail tags per individual hunter make the possibility of hunting whitetail more worthwhile? Also yes, I understand that Idaho doesn't have pet deer like in Texas.
It's a legit question. Im a transplant from Texas, where we get multiple tags each year. Ive also heard (possible Fudd lore) from older locals that Whitetail were not around here until western expansion in the 1800's.