Elky Welky
Well-known member
Okay, but you live in Lewistown, Fergus Co., population 11,000 and are active in the hunting community there and talking with like-minded people, whereas I was raised in Helena, pop 75,000 where mule deer were are are still seen as a not-so-good-tasting pest because there are so many of them in the city (the city where most wildlife management decisions are ultimately made, often by people who don't hunt).I couldn't disagree more with this. The only people I talk to that don't acknowledge that there's a problem are the people that only hunt elk and whitetails. Come to think of it, most of those people hunt on private at least half the time too. Never in my life can I remember so many people being disappointed with the mule deer situation and hunter crowding.
Ultimately, your disagreement is anecdotal and regional, and is not supported by FWP's statewide survey. And therein lies part of the problem I'm raising here. Montana is bigger than HT and the people you run into in the field, and you have more people to persuade than just those hunting in regions 4, 6, and 7. And those people who mostly hunt elk and whitetails (myself one of them), often don't turn down an easy shot at a mule deer, and they are citizens as well, with just as much of a right for mule deer to be managed for them as everyone else.
If you need an anecdote to support an argument, here's mine: I moved to Billings 7 years ago from Missoula, and was excited to start hunting mule deer out East simply because I never seriously had (except, of course, when I was also antelope hunting in Eastern MT), and I found it to be pretty great. I really enjoyed it and took a few mule deer bucks that I was happy with, and was surprised by the health, tastiness, and body size of the animals on this side of the State. Then I joined this forum a few years ago and found the mule deer thread. I asked some questions to try to catch up, because my personal experiences certainly didn't match all the noise there. I was lambasted and attacked for simply asking questions, but I knew I wasn't alone.
If you look at the themes in the regional meetings too, you see that predator management was raised as much or more than season length and rut hunting. Most folks advocating for changes in mule deer season don't care about predators, whereas it is pretty much the only thing lots of folks in Regions 1 and 2 care about. This state is too big and diverse to solely rely on localized anecdotes.