Which is why thats a completely useless point thats distracting from the real topic at hand.
I think it may actually be very relevant.
Why do you think the hunting is better where there has not been access (free access, anyway)?
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Which is why thats a completely useless point thats distracting from the real topic at hand.
There are always more fish on the other side of the river.Why do you think the hunting is better where there has not been access (free access, anyway)?
I don't think this is a red herring, these are relevant questions. I also wouldn't necessarily say hunting is "better." We're the 4th largest state in the country. There's some massive wilderness areas and national forests on the western side of the state with "better hunting." Better is ultimately subjective.I think it may actually be very relevant.
Why do you think the hunting is better where there has not been access (free access, anyway)?
I'd echo @Gerald Martin on that. Multiple issues require multiple solutions working together. Access, quality, quantity, habitat, etc. all need to be addressed hand-and-hand, and "fixing" one alone won't fix the other.Good points @Elky Welky, I appreciate the response.
Assuming that:
-On balance, there are currently more animals on private and limited-access public than accessible public
-There are tens of millions (fact check me) of free-accessible acres already
I tend to view this as more of a quality issue. I’m not sure that increasing free access is going to be the bonanza some people are envisioning, and perhaps could actually be a net-negative.
As a DIY public land hunter, I can see both sides of this one.
It probably won't. A big reason those animals are on private is because the private is higher quality ground, and that is on purpose. Not every blocked corner leads to Elk Mountain. There are myriad factors, and CC is just one piece. But you have to start somewhere and then there is the principle of the thing.I tend to view this as more of a quality issue. I’m not sure that increasing free access is going to be the bonanza some people are envisioning, and perhaps could actually be a net-negative.
A big reason those animals are on private is because the private is higher quality ground, and that is on purpose.