Justabirdwatcher
Well-known member
I doubt they need you to run to their defense. And the funny thing to me would be that you, or they, would assume I have less experience in this area than either of you.The funny thing to me is that you seem to think you are the only person on here with any experience. I'm betting you don't know (or care) what @Hunting Wife does, or for how long.
If you are going to start a dick measuring contest, you should at least know what you are getting into.
Go back and look at the posts if you're really interested in who started the "dick measuring contest", tiger.
Nah, I just call out folks who repeatedly act like they are the only ones who know anything on these forums. Just the opposite of what you are suggesting in fact. I expressed my concern and hunting wife came along to poo-poo it, then followed with a condescending "tiger" comment when I called them out, doubling down on exactly what I called them out for. And now you run to their defense. Comical. You honestly think I don't realize that on a western-based hunting forum, there are dozens if not hundreds of members who have experience in the wildland fire world? LOL
The irony here is that hw contradicts themselves by actually agreeing with me after basically accusing me of crying wolf for no reason. All of this would be hilarious if it wasn't so sad - people feeling like they have to flex on a stranger who did nothing more than share their concerns based on nearly 40 years of experience in the field. So damn unnecessary if we just stick to the topic or simply respectfully disagree, as (again, ironically) hw suggests. No accusations of hyperbole. No condescending "tiger" comments. No need to continuously "correct" other members, as is their pattern.
If they weren't so busy trying to look like the smartest person in the room, hw might actually have a few things to learn from my experience, as I'm sure I could from theirs. For example, their opinion "Has any fed land manager been able to use it as their bread and butter strategy up until now? No, not by a long shot." is simply not accurate. I'm not sure if they are uninformed, or just lack experience in areas where this is true. Because it is certainly the bread and butter strategy on hundreds of thousands of acres of federal land I'm intimately familiar with, hence the entire reason I started the thread.
A lot of our federal lands, and those state and NGO lands that also rely on Rx burning as their primary habitat management tool (read: prairies, pine savannah, coastal wetlands) are at risk of losing significant amounts of federal fire support. Anyone who thinks this administration is concerned in the least with fire as a habitat management tool is either naive or hasn't been paying attention. This WFS merger will have major consequences to wildlife habitats IMO and over the next few years, we will see that play out.
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