Should i later be subsidized for having said ducks and pond?
Certainly, depending on circumstances- isn’t that what the CRP program essentially does?
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Should i later be subsidized for having said ducks and pond?
regarding allocation: R/NR quota differences and economic disparity (14 vs 744 for a deer tag).I’m slow today. Is this in reference to R/NR disparity, or hunter/non hunter disparity?
Do explain, how does the landowner provide the habitat on public land?
This makes sense to me. As a landowner (of a certain acreage), I get to hunt my place. If I want to hunt the NF I can apply like everyone else. If I want to try to monetize it, I can. But it's only good on my place, which incentizes landowners to create/manage better habitat.Sure, as long as they are only valid on lands owned by the landowner.
Getting a tag valid unit or statewide just because you own land is complete BS and antithetical to the idea that the wildlife do not belong to the individual but rather the public trust.
To me this is the best solution. It worked great in Ohio. They weren’t transferable which is another topic in and of itself but allowing someone the opportunity to hunt on their OWN land without cost makes sense to me. Giving them preference to hunt land they do not own outright, but rather equally own with the other fellow citizens, does not make sense.
Got it. Glad we agree the landowners do not provide public land habitat, just private land habitat.Most game animals are transient.
Got it. Glad we agree the landowners do not provide public land habitat, just private land habitat.
Let them hunt the animals on their land where the habitat they provide is. That is the fairest compensation.
However, this is also just another way to drive up land prices to the point where "locals" can't afford to live in the place they grew up. At least if they live in areas with good hunting. Thankfully Chelan County doesn't fit that mold!This makes sense to me. As a landowner (of a certain acreage), I get to hunt my place. If I want to hunt the NF I can apply like everyone else. If I want to try to monetize it, I can. But it's only good on my place, which incentizes landowners to create/manage better habitat.
Exactly.This makes sense to me. As a landowner (of a certain acreage), I get to hunt my place. If I want to hunt the NF I can apply like everyone else. If I want to try to monetize it, I can. But it's only good on my place, which incentizes landowners to create/manage better habitat.
Not wholly, no.Certainly, depending on circumstances- isn’t that what the CRP program essentially does?
Not even why I don't use it but carry on. mtmuleyVirtue signal received.
Hard pass. In Ohio it extended to immediate family, again, which makes sense to me, but those were in addition to, not transferred to the landowner(s) on the deed. Transferable = for sale.If they were transferable, that would be a good step in the right direction![]()
Let’s back up for a minute. The Seven Sisters or Pillars are:regarding allocation: R/NR quota differences and economic disparity (14 vs 744 for a deer tag).
Democratic Management: I think the WDFW board is a prime example of special interest management vs demographics. But also, no way we spend the kinds of money we do one game species in a truly democratic system, at least not in WA.
Maybe, but I hardly think landowner tags were a primary force in driving up land cost in Ohio over the last decade, a secondary or tertiary maybe?However, this is also just another way to drive up land prices to the point where "locals" can't afford to live in the place they grew up. At least if they live in areas with good hunting. Thankfully Chelan County doesn't fit that mold!
More likely leasing, nobody's buying ground for the free landowner tag. Unless they can sell them like New Mexico.Maybe, but I hardly think landowner tags were a primary force in driving up land cost in Ohio over the last decade, a secondary or tertiary maybe?
It says, "wildlife belongs to everyone." IMO that single phrase has both explicit and implicit meaning, explicity everyone can apply for access, but implicity that access is fair or at least fair-ish. MT allows EVERY MT citizen access to a deer, but only a fraction of the people from other states. In my mind, that is the very definition of "not everyone". To jump over to another topic where opportunity is highly valued yet only a small subset of people actually partipate... If someone had to drive across the state to vote, to take a day off work, or pay a small fee, or show their ID, would that still be an opportunity to vote? We, as a society, are not settled on that. Also, if you look at the last line of #3, to "ensure that access is equitable". But it's not, at least not universally.To follow up on my previous post, what is opportunity? Does it need to be equal between residents and nonresidents? Some states are legally mandated to manage wildlife primarily for the benefit of residents.
It doesn’t say we all have equal opportunity. Also, we all have option to move if we wish to have a greater opportunity to participate.
That said, I vehemently disagree with huge price differentials between R and NR. All this does is promote further commercialization and moves us towards an egalitarian model.
Maybe not everywhere, but take MT, you already have people buying tophy ranches, and you have a lot of people who apply for a tag that don't get it. If you could buy 40 acres and get a transferable OW tag, that would definitely drive up prices.Maybe, but I hardly think landowner tags were a primary force in driving up land cost in Ohio over the last decade, a secondary or tertiary maybe?
You ask that question amd you'll get 10k different answers. Juts take a look at any one of the Montana mule deer threads.Does any state manage wildlife based on what the people want?
I’m assuming non-transferable. Not in favor of transferable/sellable landowner tags.Maybe not everywhere, but take MT, you already have people buying tophy ranches, and you have a lot of people who apply for a tag that don't get it. If you could buy 40 acres and get a transferable OW tag, that would definitely drive up prices.