Pelican
Well-known member
That sounds like a good idea. I would maybe feel differently about them in CO if we weren’t annually smothered by NR elk hunters.Let the kids use them it just adds more options and opportunity & possible days afield
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That sounds like a good idea. I would maybe feel differently about them in CO if we weren’t annually smothered by NR elk hunters.Let the kids use them it just adds more options and opportunity & possible days afield
That sounds like a good idea. I would maybe feel differently about them in CO if we weren’t annually smothered by NR elk hunters.
Looks like we have a substantial lead on 2nd place MT, so we can continue to not allow cross bows, unless we want to shoot for 60%. WE’RE #1!Data for your statement though instead of smothered, I would say in CO we generously share our opportunity. CO provides 50% of all NR elk hunting opportunity in the United States.
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OTC archery CO
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WY season structure is great and WY hunt quality is reportedly very good. The structure is possible because of the limited participation numbers. For CO to have proportionally the same number of hunters in the field per elk that WY does CO would need to cut 30K NR elk hunters. (Assuming managers/biologists/weather/predators etc are all equally obviously they aren’t)The beauty of the way it's done in Wyoming, is that every kill in archery, by recurve, compound or crossbow, means one less hunter in rifle season. Of course 5 areas statewide have a "choose your weapon" status which I am totally against. Our season structure is what makes our hunting great here.
If your worried about kids and old people afield with crossbows you have bigger issues and might as well stay home and watch youtube.If our aim is to make it as effortless as possible for anyone to kill everything on the landscape, why are we still messing around with lead, gunpowder, broadheads and arrows. We should all be advocating for lasers! No drop at any range, no need for a range finder, no jumping the string, no recoil, no lead poisoning, no thought or effort whatsoever. Hell, with the right optics, we wouldn’t even have to leave our houses!!! Any dipshit could kill anything he wanted from anywhere!! Heck, parts would even be cooked in the process!
Not a fan of the crossrifle if you’re curious.
Why introduce wolves and pressure a strained resource????@SFC B
I have never hunted archery and started hunting late in life (AOH) at 33. I have hunted with a rifle and a shotgun in the south, midwest and west. During the entire time I have hunted I have had to listen to the argument (ESPECIALLY in IN) surrounding crossbow usage. For my purposes I will except the disability and old age accommodations (which I think almost all are good with). These are what seem to be the issues to me (and I have NO personal dog in this fight)
Whitetail in IN on mostly private is a different situation than elk on public land in CO
1) Many (not all) archery hunters seem to have serious superiority complexes. Archers are "better, more serious" hunters than rifle/ML hunters......then it is recurve hunters better than compound.....then it is primitive better than recurve.....then personally built bow better than "store bought" etc. ALL of them seem to get a case of the a$$ about crossbows and think they shouldn't be included in archery at all (see the "crossrifle" comment above). These attitudes lead to the 2nd issue....
While this may be true it has nothing to do with the issue of crossbows in OTC season in CO. On a personal level some people may not want crossbows in CO for this reason, on a resource level this reasoning is irrelevant.
2) Since these archery hunters feel they are "better, more serious" they feel entitled to much longer seasons which nearly always give them the opportunity to hunt the rut (where most states don't do that for other means of taking) and, the ugly unsaid undercurrent, more opportunity at TROPHY ANIMALS.
Archery for elk typically has lower harvest rates, which allows for long seasons and hunting in the rut, that's the bottom line of management. Lower the success rates and you can increase other variables. MT, UT, CO, off the top of my head all allow you to hunt the rut with a rifle in specific units where management goals + harvest rates allow it. (EE010E1R in CO, back country units in Mt, or EB3045 in Utah)
If we are worried about too many animals being taken why not simply shorten the season and limit tags like the other means of take?
CO already has the some of the shortest hunting seasons in the west, and bifurcating the archery season has already been proposed regardless of the crossbow issue, as OTC archery crowding has become an issue. Further biologist have noted that increased human activity hunting and non-consumptive disturbs elk enough in the rut to be of concern. That is one reason the SW CO units went fully limited for archery.
Too many humans in the woods in Sept, period.
If archery hunters do it for the "additional challenge" why would you care how someone else hunts? If you are hunting "for meat" how about only FEMALE tags being OTC?
PG. 37 of the big game brochure, Colorado has OTC cow elk archery tags. Though in many units this is problematic, elk aren't whitetails. Some of are herds are in decline killing more cows will destroy the resource. Cow quotas in many units have been dramatically reduced or even removed.
Indiana has 680,000 whitetails. CO, WY,MT, ID, and WA combined have that many elk. Apples to Oranges in terms of management.
All of these (and I am sure there are other similar approaches) would address concerns while you could still expand hunting opportunity with crossbows. Again, I have no dog in the fight other than hoping for the hunting community to be MORE united and inclusive instead of being factional and spiteful.
You can already hunt CO with a crossbow, during the rifle season? Crossbow hunters aren't excluded in CO, you just can't use them in the archery season. Further for whatever reason you can't hunt with a bow you can get a muzzy tag, and hunt during the same time period. I would support crossbows during the muzzy season as they tags are fully limited, just not in the OTC seasons.
In my mind this discussion has nothing to do with being inclusive but rather has to do with a single interest group being selfish. There are numerous opportunities for anyone who wants to hunt in CO. Someone with a disability who want's to hunt the rut can already get a crossbow permit, a kid or older individual can already hunt the rut with a muzzy, or in some units with a rifle. If you really just like crossbows, take one out during 1st rifle, the elk are still bugling and the rut.
The job of CPW is to manage wildlife, it's not to placate hunters by making sure everyone gets to hunt elk during their favorite season with their favorite weapon.
I've hunted CO archery, rifle, and muzzy.
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Food for thought with SW CO as an example. Those units just went fully limited for archery.
Let's look at 751
2006 - 449 total elk killed
1407 total Rifle hunters, 28% success rate, 395 elk killed
257 Archery hunters, 14% success rate, 35 elk
2019 - 222 total elk killed
973 total Rifle hunters, 16% success rate, 153 elk killed
423 Archery hunters, 13% success rate, 57 elk killed
So in this unit the total harvest declined by 1/2, rifle success rates and number of hunters cratered, yet archery harvests and hunter numbers doubled, and success rates stayed the same.
This is a pretty common theme throughout CO, across the board rifle seasons have fewer hunters and archery seasons have doubled or more. Unit 53 went from 406 hunters in 2005 to 1045 in 2019.
Over this same time period 2006-2019, Colorado added 1 million residents 20% growth. Aug-Sept is the nicest time to be in the woods. Think about how many more bikers, hikes, etc we are adding into elk habitat each fall.
Why would we add more people into the mix? Why put further pressure on a strained resource.
I'm just wondering what is your reasoning? Why are you against crossbows? Just curious.If a Holy Cross was affixed to the cross bow and my favorite Priest anointed then I would still be against crossbows outside of rifle or any weapon seasons. Oh, air rifles, too.
my tldr interpretative summary of wllms post, which i agree with is:
you simply can't add crossbows to an unlimited over-the-county archery tag that is good for nearly the entire state and is already an overcrowded season. limit it and cut the number of hunters in half? no problem, add cross bows
really the only logical argument for not adding crossbows onto colorado's otc archery tag is that the jump in numbers and the nearly guaranteed jump in success rates is not sustainable for the elk herds and will force cpw's hand on further limiting opportunity in the state. but further limiting opportunity is likely a foregone conclusion for our future anyway
correct me if i'm wrong on my interpretation and summar and i'll apologize, but i feel it should be reiterated