Bison Hunt News

BigHornRam

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Looks like the hunt may go forward. Abuse of the legal system by the anti's will be the only thing stopping it.

Thousand vying to hunt bison
By BECKY BOHRER of the Associated Press



BILLINGS - Nearly 6,200 people, most of them Montana residents, have applied for the 24 licenses still available for Montana's first bison hunt in 15 years, state wildlife officials said Monday.

Tom Palmer, a spokesman for the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, believes the level of interest has to do with the hunt's design.

"It's a real hunt. I think hunters recognize that and are interested in participating," he said. As of early afternoon, there were 6,177 applications, he said. Of those, 5,992 were Montana residents.


Last month, wildlife commissioners approved a three-month hunt of bison that leave Yellowstone National Park and enter southern Montana. Friday marked the deadline to apply for a license. Palmer said a drawing would be held next week.

The hunt will be broken into two periods - Nov. 15-Jan. 15 and Jan. 16-Feb. 15. During the entire hunt, as many as 50 bison could be killed. Hunters would be allowed to take a total of 25 bison during each period.

Of the 50 total licenses, just 24 remained available to general applicants. Ten were allocated for a hunt that was canceled early this year after concerns about its potential effect on Montana's image, and 16 were set aside for American Indian tribes in Montana.

Hunters who get a license must undergo training for such things as killing a bison and possibly encountering protesters and reporters. Palmer said he wasn't sure when that training would be held.

Bison hunting hasn't been allowed since 1991. The state Legislature halted the practice following protests, including a tourism boycott. Wildlife officials have said the upcoming hunt will bear no resemblance to past hunts, when wardens led hunters to their sometimes peacefully grazing prey. That hunt was criticized even by some hunters as akin to shooting cattle.

Josh Osher, of the bison-advocacy group Buffalo Field Campaign, said there are problems with this hunt, too. For example, he said, there are no set population targets for bison outside of Yellowstone and that the lands on which bison might be found are limited. His group was reviewing its legal options.

Yellowstone currently has its highest documented bison population - an estimated 4,900 animals. Bison commonly leave the park, particularly in the winter, to look for forage.

But their wandering worries Montana ranchers, because some bison have brucellosis. The disease can cause cows to abort, and livestock officials contend the bison could give it to cattle. Bison advocates counter that there's never been a documented case of transmission between bison and cattle in the wild.

Craig Sharpe, executive director of the Montana Wildlife Federation, regards the hunt as a first step in having bison treated like wildlife, instead of as livestock or a disease threat.

Sharpe said he thought more people would have applied but believes the relatively short amount of time between the wildlife commission's decision to hold the hunt and the application deadline played a part. It was about three weeks.

The abbreviated hunt, canceled earlier this year, drew close to 8,400 applicants.
 
Here's an editorial from one of the whiney opposition in yesterday's paper:

‘Hunt' embarrasses Montana, governor


I'm writing to express my disappointment and sadness in reading that Fish, Wildlife and Parks has approved a bison "hunt" near Yellowstone National Park.

When Gov. Brian Schweitzer was elected, I was pleased that he called off a so-called hunt because he worried that there wouldn't be a fair-chase opportunity for the bison. I thought that surely that would be the end of it n that a "hunt" wasn't going to happen because one doesn't hunt an animal that doesn't run, hide or show much concern even when humans are within shouting distance of it, much less within firing range. I hoped the governor's office and FWP would remember the terrible national coverage another hunt received in the early 1990s and not want to repeat the humiliation. I'd expected a progressive administration to have the courage to refuse to bow to livestock interests who, in their unscientific hysteria over brucellosis, seem determined to wipe out this species by slaughtering them at taxpayers' expense and by depriving them of habitat even on public lands.

This new onslaught on bison is ugly business that will bring ugly press to Montana and to the governor's office. It's a shame and I'm ashamed of my state for condoning the slaughter of animals that represent the West with such grace and quiet dignity; that once lived free of this sort of harassment and stalking before Europeans and their descendants found them; that, nearly extinct just a half-century ago, and even now, trying to survive in a tiny fraction of their former number, deserve our protection and admiration for being grand, for minding their own business, for miraculously surviving so many attempts to kill every last one of them because they are not cows or sheep.

I hope FWP and Schweitzer's office will reconsider this sham hunt. Please write and urge them to leave these animals in peace this winter.

Angela M. Timm, Missoula
 
"that once lived free of this sort of harassment and stalking before Europeans and their descendants found them"

Wolves didn't eat them and Indians didn't drive them off cliffs, either. :rolleyes: C'mon - they are meat. They are wild. We hunt them.
 
LMAO.... a "hunt" of "wild" animals that spent all summer getting their picture taken in Jellystone Park....

Hope the "hunters" remember to wipe the cheet-o's off the bison's lips when they take their kill pictures.....

Hey Paul, what kind of "abuse of the legal system" are you thinking of?? (this will be entertaining to see his lack of reply).
 
I'm one of the 6000 applicants. Don't imagine it will be much for excitement, but I suppose it could be a real challenge waiting for a nice bull to step out somewhere not teaming with Buffalo Hippies. I would like to shoot one.
 
Oak,

I saw that one too..... But I passed....


GH,
You gonna make it exciting with a bow or a blackpowder, or just turn Mean Green loose and go start cutting up hamburgers???
 
If I get drawn... I'm going to run it down with my horse and kill with with a spear, like god intended bison to be hunted... :D
 
Jose,

Don't be giving any of your swollen assed lawyer pals any ideas on how to fatten their already fat wallets. Cheeto finished bison is as good as it get's so don't reck it for us.

BTW has your "My own private Idaho" moniker got you any "dates" yet?

Bambi,

If you were a true pureist, you'ld run them off a cliff, on foot, with a spear, and with all of your clan for back up. The ultimate party hunt.
 
Hey Paul and Greenhorn...

Make those cases of beer guiness....

Oh, and Paul are you going to welch out on the bet like a true republican?
 
Buzz Boy,

I'll pay up when the first Bison goes down. Are you going to pay up if the animal rights freaks shut it down at the last minute?
 
Wouldn't a true democrat have the wager's loss reimbursed from a subsidy program?
 
NHY- If the bison hunt goes through, it sounds like BHR will be a conservative about the same way GW is...spend, spend, spend!
 
Buzz, you will have to stop by and grab the beer next time in town. If the bison hunt/circus doesn't happen, you will have to deliver 2 cases, but you will be required to drink your share.
 
Are they really going to do it? Or, will they cancel again? I hope your father in law goes and gets one. You could do a 3 generation picture with it maybe? Awesome!!!
 
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