This kinda' shit annoys some, confuses others, and can actually make some folk's eyes glaze over. Show 'em a 350" bull - they snap right back............................
So what kind of Camo should I get for late rifle season?
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This kinda' shit annoys some, confuses others, and can actually make some folk's eyes glaze over. Show 'em a 350" bull - they snap right back............................
Outside of a place like Yellowstone I have no use for them in the lower 48.
Have you ever set foot in northern Wis or MI's UP?
they are rooted in ignorance and a grade school level biology education
Ignorance goes both ways - opponents may not share your view of biology, but this post seems to suggest you may be ignorant to the day to day reality of resident western ranchers. While us flat-lander tag-hunters lament "nature" from our living rooms, it's the locals who deal daily with livestock and other associated problems. As with most things, the truth typically lies towards the middle.
Ranchers are compensated for their losses. Every business has risks. Ranchers get plenty of help from the government. I am certainly familiar with wolves on the landscape. Where I live there are more wolves than anywhere in the west currently. My view of biology is not based on opinion, but with facts and research on the subject.
Yea deer are practically extinct up here
Stowell says they have also seen a shift in how wolves are targeting elk. From 2003 to 2008, elk mortality from wolves was 80 percent male and 20 percent female elk, and the males were mostly older calves or young bulls. "Now it seems the wolves have developed skills in testing and picking out vulnerable calves and cows and are apparently leaving the bulls alone," said Stowell. He reports that during the past two years, 10 of the 19 elk killed by wolves have been female and six of those were of breeding age.
In May of 2009, for example, three cows were killed by wolves, all with a 92 percent likelihood of being pregnant. That summer three calves – all one to two months old – and two yearlings and a 16- to 17-year-old cow were killed by wolves. The trend is especially troubling for biologists who value cows based on their potential for producing calves and increasing the herd.
These kinds of statements really used to piss me off because they are rooted in ignorance and a grade school level biology education which equates prey species populations to be solely controlled by predators.
I don’t have to tell you. You told me ..Sorry you think so, Greenhorn. Perhaps you can tell me exactly what YOU think that makes you so much better informed.
"Out of control" is the phrase that comes up whenever someone sees 1 wolf, or can't fill a half dozen doe tags in a couple of hours. The only thing that relates to "control" is what abundances are relative to what the speaker's idea of optimal numbers should be (usually ZERO). Meanwhile, we all dream of hunting like Lewis and Clark saw it, when wolves and bears and lions were "out of control" (by definition). We have huge ungulate populations all over the country. In many cases, much larger numbers that L & C ever saw. And yet, people want even more. In the middle of wolf-central Wyoming and Montana, elk hunting is excellent right now.
"An abundance"? Every year? In western MT I’ve taken 2 elk in the last 6 years. This rifle season I've seen 2 bulls on public land (a spike and one nice bull). Last year I saw 1 elk total and I shot it. I've cut 2 elk tracks while hunting this fall. I’ve seen 3 mule deer bucks. I've got 24 days hunting into this year's general season. Wolves have made things extremely challenging where I choose to hunt. I have not seen any wolf tracks this year. Over the last three years, wolves were really making the rounds. Why have they left? There’s nothing to eat. I could, though, pick a different area, maybe get my checkbook out or chum up to a rancher out here - there's no shortage of elk in the local district I hunt. They are jam packed in the foothills, amidst houses, roads, and center pivot fields by the hundreds. I could hop over the hill and enjoy participating in the “record setting” elk hunts going on in the upper Madison flats with all the hunters, and wolves roaming around amidst them. Or maybe I can just really lower the bar and shoot a cow from a sniveling farmer’s field this February. After all, there’s so many elk, they are leaving the season open for cows until February 15th. Elk numbers are STRONG. There are no doubt a lot of factors involved but wolves have certainly put gasoline on the fire to help speed things right along - the private land harboring, in particular.You certainly have no problem finding an abundance of huge bucks and bulls every year. Are you really feeling so challenged by wolves?
I was not offering an insult. It was a fact. If it hurt your feelers, my apologies.You are quick to insult, but you don't offer much else than an insult
BrentD, I can't tell you how delightful it is to see your reply, over coffee, as I get ready to head out for the last AM of MT's season. Day 26 for me this season, just rifle season that is.
It's good to hear that you've talked to many people on wolves, all those that matter, and have read all the peer-reviewed studies and data, you've hunted the west "from stem to stern" to come to your vastly knowledgeable opinions.
One thing's for sure, and I've said it already - you're a delusional clueless idiot.
Add helicopter gunning and any other applicable means for the free fire zone.