Forkyfinder
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2023
- Messages
- 3,957
Last 2/3 weeks LE and you can sell a lot of points and applications.Maybe make more LE districts in different zones? Maybe choose units that have over 75% (or some %) public land.

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Last 2/3 weeks LE and you can sell a lot of points and applications.Maybe make more LE districts in different zones? Maybe choose units that have over 75% (or some %) public land.
Not giving Montanans 5 wks rifle hunting in the rut is an assault on traditional and values.Last 2/3 weeks LE and you can sell a lot of points and applications.![]()
They still get to. If the caps are matched with existing preasure.Not giving Montanans 5 wks rifle hunting in the rut is an assault on traditional and values.
I don't like what I see looking forward, Much easier on my sanity to live in the past.I donât disagree with this at all. Itâs one thing to look at the mistakes from the past and learn from them though, and another to moan and groan about how great it used to be.
One is constructive analysis, and ultimately still forward looking. The other is useless nostalgia.
They are not going to agree to burn their points.They still get to. If the caps are matched with existing preasure.
Theyd just have to pick a region (or unit) and burn bonus points to do it.
Iâd burn mine they arenât worth much anywayThey are not going to agree to burn their points.
Existing pressure is too much if we keep hunting for the duration of the rut.They still get to. If the caps are matched with existing preasure.
Theyd just have to pick a region (or unit) and burn bonus points to do it.
Its not existing pressure for NR and R.Existing pressure is too much if we keep hunting for the duration of the rut.
Theres a lot more of schlubs with little to no points that arent worth anything. Id love to see the odds of getting a trophy permit getting better with a "rut opportunity permit" making people burn points. Making them worth something (either to use often or to hold on to) would be a refreshing change.They are not going to agree to burn their points.
I wounder just how much this data is influenced by the bad droughts. With the poor fawn crop in those years, there just wasn't many young bucks to shoot in 2023, so people just hunted harder to kill fewer older deer remaining.No, it was just my way of detecting sample or harvest bias. Obviously, total recruitment year to year plays a role as well. But, given true random sampling, the graphs I posted above shouldn't happen.
Droughts and winters...I wounder just how much this data is influenced by the bad droughts. With the poor fawn crop in those years, there just wasn't many young bucks to shoot in 2023, so people just hunted harder to kill fewer older deer remaining.
More than people think. It was also what's happened with bull elk in Western Montana. When all you have available is mature bulls on public, they take a lickin'. Made even worse when you have crap recruitment and elk harboring because of so much general OTC pressure.I wounder just how much this data is influenced by the bad droughts. With the poor fawn crop in those years, there just wasn't many young bucks to shoot in 2023, so people just hunted harder to kill fewer older deer remaining.
I would like to think that there is a way to improve quality and still be able to hunt every year. The way to accomplish is by putting more risk of tag soup if you chose to be selective. Long seasons, hunting the rut, open terrain, freezer filler tags and today's technology all give us the luxury of being able to be selective. For the individual hunter it is awesome. Not so much for the herd when a big percentage of hunters are selective. The more selective we are the less random the harvest and the more focused the harvest is on a smaller percentage of the herd. Bucks with the potential to grow a larger set of antlers die young an by the bullet and bucks with poor antlers will live longer and are more likely to die of natural causes. We need to get to a more random harvest.@antlerradar - if the quality was to improve, wouldnt the good hunting (with no LE) be quickly discovered and hunted hard again?
Thats why i wish for generous LE.
Have you thought about applying for a wildlife manager or other somewhat-influential FWP position, and as Gandhi puts it, being the change you wish to see?Absolutely. Even though some don't want to accept reality, the FWP is a huge part of why we find ourselves in this mess.
The whole time predators were making gains, via severely reduced lion quotas (FWP management), the increases in grizzlies and wolves, there was also no or severely delayed response on cow/doe harvest. Also as you noted, increases in weapon efficiency, GPS use, etc.
By the time the FWP reacted to what should have been intuitively obvious, it was too late.
Once herds are reduced to the levels we have now, the only way to see them rebound is drastic management changes.
I always thought it was impossible to severely impact whitetail populations where I hunt. But, after 3 seasons of hunters being able to kill 1-3 does each, 2 of those OTC, and a buck...I was wrong. It's been over 10 years and the deer still aren't back to what they were.
Elk are the same way after the brain trust at FWP implemented "cow week", the elk have not recovered from that, likely never will.
Mule deer no different, years and years of being able to kill does on B tags and any deer for 3-7 days.
I argued for decades with a past biologist that what they were doing was unsustainable, may as well have been talking to a wall.
Chickens have come home to roost...and I'm not happy to say, "I told them so".
But, nothing will change, so we have that going for us.
Not sure I answered your question with my last rant. Hunters have always flocked to the next best place in MT. The problem is MT is running out of next best places so people are taking management into there own hands and leasing up private land. Would LE stop this. It might, but if you think that the legislator is bad now with giving out special tags to landowners and the wealthy, just wait until the entire state is LE.@antlerradar - if the quality was to improve, wouldnt the good hunting (with no LE) be quickly discovered and hunted hard again?
Thats why i wish for generous LE.
Wait - so what youre saying would be something like pushing the department to issue more elk b (unlimited?) tags would be a bad thing? Welcome aboard Gerald - ive had that opinion through the legislative session. I wish you would have too.Without trying to spot burn Buzzâs reference hunting area, it has actually burned multiple times in a large area.
It takes a long time to habitat your way out of a situation where the overall predation overwhelms recruitment. Even longer if the overwhelm of predation doesnât diminish while habitat is improved.
The best habitat in the world wonât add more deer or elk to the landscape if thereâs 30% of the population killed each year and only 20% recruited the following year.
Itâs a whole different reality on the ground in western MT than it was from 1960-1990. Recovery of wolves, full carrying capacity of mountain lions, same amount of black bears, increasing number of grizzlies, loss of winter range to development or human intrusion, higher human populations.
Add in increased harvest efficiency with increased technology and mobility and expansion of seasons as Buzz noted above.
Insert definition of insanity at this pointâŚ.(âŚ..)
Hmm, it seems that numbers are down. Ironically, numbers are down in areas that have relatively good habitat as well. Thereâs a lot of NW MT that still has extensive logging and has burned in the past ten years.
What a lot of folks donât seem to realize is that weâre not on a trajectory to maintain the current level of quality with this amount of âopportunityâ.
Look at Region 6 and 7 for example. It took a drastic reduction in opportunity to harvest does to slow the drop in population and move it up slightly from the lowest point in the past ten years. What would 2024âs numbers look like of the prior yearâs antlerless harvest had been maintained at the level of when the population was at LTA? It took hunters forcing FWP via legislative action to change their management policies. Iâm thankful those folks stepped up and demanded the change.
Sean has some numbers for buck harvest in region 6. If memory serves me correctly that region is down 41% from LTA population even while buck harvest is 250% of LT harvest.
Anyone want to predict the trajectory of what region 6!is going to look like in five years?
You think the average commissioner is more qualified?Have you thought about applying for a wildlife manager or other somewhat-influential FWP position, and as Gandhi puts it, being the change you wish to see?
Would you please point out where I said that the average commissioner is more qualified and youâre not?You think the average commissioner is more qualified?
I don't.
How many have worked in the woods for 35 years looking at habitat and hunted for 40 years? How many have biology degrees? How many have natural resources degrees?
If you think all I do is just blast wildlife without giving things thought and trying to understand what's going on and what impact I'm having...you'd be wrong.
Why it's becoming increasingly difficult for me to pull the trigger these days. Why I don't shoot or hunt mule deer anymore in Montana, rarely kill a bull elk there too. It's not because I can't, it's because not only shouldn't I be doing so, nobody should be.
I'm forced to manage when the departments won't. Also why my wife and I draw doe/fawn pronghorn tags, 2 each, and wing them in the trash every year.
But to answer your question, not a chance in hell. I tend to put the health of wildlife as a top priority, not 10th fiddle to the needs of outfitters, land owners, real estate agents, insurance companies, and whining hunters.
A vast majority of management decisions these days have nothing to do with what's best for wildlife, public lands, etc. The decisions are now based on social needs and politics. Wildlife survives in spite of what we do in more and more case, not because of what we do right.
It's a good thing wildlife is as resilient as it is or it would be hosed.