buckhorn10
Member
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2021
- Messages
- 55
I been building points for colorado elk unit 61 for 25 years hope to finally draw but maybe I wont , just keeps out of reach each year
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I am about 15 years in applying in a whole bunch of states for a whole bunch of critters. I have drawn some good tags but not as many as people would think. I have drawn just as many NR "random" good tags from New Mexico (elk) and Idaho (moose) than point related great tags. The point creep certainly wont guarantee me any sheep or moose tags in the lower 48. If one of those is in my pocket I am a lucky fella...
Your good health gives me hope! I’m MUCH younger and wonder if I will really be able to hike around for five more years.For me I am 66 years old and also wish I had started when I was younger, thankfully I am in good health and still go for now but who knows what the future holds for any of us.
I have kids (now men) with 12 points in AZ, WY, and CO as NR for elk, deer, and antelope. Talk about no mans land...We are going to burn them together soon, have fun, and move on.mdhunter I am from Md also and been doing the same thing for years too
Unit 61 might not be a glory tag, but it's awfully close.I'm sitting on 15 elk points in CO @ 40yo. I'm not expecting I'll ever draw one of the glory tags there...
Every time point creep comes up, I think about this chart. I know it's for AZ, but it is useful since it can apply to other states I "assume" it reflects a snapshot of interest in western state elk hunting applications. I empathize with baby boomers holding out for a glory tag. It makes me pause for everyone else that is younger than the boomer-bell curve.
I would say tag availability is going to decline over time. Habitat losses, improvements in technology, higher success rates will all equal less available tags. Just a fact, even though I don't like it.Every time point creep comes up, I think about this chart. I know it's for AZ, but it is useful since it can apply to other states I "assume" it reflects a snapshot of interest in western state elk hunting applications. I empathize with baby boomers holding out for a glory tag. It makes me pause for everyone else that is younger than the boomer-bell curve.
The PEAK of this graph's curve shows the baby boomer population with tags in AZ is 58 at the time of publishing and the last of this group is 52. The age at which the majority of people give up on tags appears to be 72 y/o.
-From 1992 to 2012, there was a significant drop in numbers between both peaks.
-From 2012 to 2020, both peaks in tag numbers stayed the same.
-On the 2020 chart, the number of hunters aged 30-52 remains constant.
Question:
Will there be increases in tag availability as the curve moves off this chart starting in six years (now five) as the baby boomers age out of this graph?