brownbear932008
Well-known member
All this talk. Now we all know good and well nothing is gonna change until the last dinosaur hits the ground in Montana.
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Riding an ox with the shirt off?I canāt wait for the write up, please review @Nameless Range post from a few years back correct tone.
Wouldn't take all that long and people would spread out not only the date they hunted but also the area. Few people want to hunt a 100 acre farm with 200 other hunters!Folks think things are crowded now, imagine if everyone hunted the same 2 weeks....
You canāt /they arenāt . Fwp is trying to kill off mule deer in Montana , and white tail populations in much of the state are exploding .Another thing I dont understand is how there is no differentiation in management between whitetails and mule deer aside from a handful of LE muley units. Not sure how you can effectively manage two different species this way.
This!Shorten the season for OTC mule deer units so that they end before the rut. Close them 10/31 or 11/5 or so. No one loses opportunity. Everyone with a tag still gets to hunt. You could still get lucky and stumble across a buck of a lifetime in October. More bucks will be able to live to maturity, rather than getting wacked as a forkie as they rut next to the road in November.
Implement a small number of special permits for each unit that allow you to hunt through the rut. Each year, a lucky few who draw will get to chase mature, rutting bucks.
Eliminate all mule deer doe tags for public land and block management areas. Keep doe tags for private land. If landowners are serious about managing game numbers on their property, they can let people on to hunt.
Keep the current dates for whitetail. If you need to need to fill the freezer on your family Thanksgiving hunt, there is plenty of opportunity to do so with a whitetail. They taste better than muleys anyway, and aren't in need of the same level of management attention.
To me, this strikes a reasonable balance between managing for numbers, age class and opportunity.
Just the opposite of Colorado. They don't want any whittailes here in the western part of the state. It's the only deer tag that's OTC and you can buy as many as you want. The problem is there's not a lot of them and most are on private land by the Arkansas River.You canāt /they arenāt . Fwp is trying to kill off mule deer in Montana , and white tail populations in much of the state are exploding .
Wish we would do a better job of thinning out the WT here in Montana. Gonna make it my mission to shoot a bunch of does this season. Iād really encourage anyone coming out here to get WT b tags instead of muley. They taste better and are pretty damn easy to find all over the stateJust the opposite of Colorado. They don't want any whittailes here in the western part of the state. It's the only deer tag that's OTC and you can buy as many as you want. The problem is there's not a lot of them and most are on private land by the Arkansas River.
I tried it once but only saw mule deer.
Would that experience be any different in October? Itās not hard to shoot a mule deer even in October. I think most people that are concerned are more concerned for the health of the herd they have already shot good bucks. Now they just donāt get to see them or the numbers of deer anymore and it will continue to get worse if we stay on the same path.Forgive me for my ignorance (I'm still new), but is the problem that there aren't enough mule deer on public land in Montana or just that there aren't enough trophy mule deer bucks? I see mule deer virtually every time I go out hunting the public lands around here, although not many bucks. Since I am mostly a meat hunter, I have used my general tag to shoot a muley doe. While I would certainly love to put a nice trophy on the wall, the hunting experience of taking the doe is largely the same. The hike in, the stalk or ambush, the field dressing, the pack-out, the meat processing- the net result is the thrill and feeling of accomplishment that we all live for. I wouldn't want to forego that experience for a few years if it's just because some hunters want to shoot a trophy-caliber buck every year.
I don't know. Maybe not? My sincere question: does my shooting a doe in November threaten the muley population? I'm less concerned about when as much as I am about overall opportunity. For example, if I'm trading a couple of weeks in November for a couple of weeks in early October, I'd take that. But if we're talking about trimming the deer season down to a couple of weeks (that run concurrently with an elk season), then the opportunity rapidly slips away. Or maybe the tail end of the season could be doe only? I'm certainly not arguing the point, but just trying to get a feel for the nature of the problem/issue. I don't know what the deer populations looked like 20 years ago, so I don't have the same perspective as a long-time Montana hunter.Would that experience be any different in October? Itās not hard to shoot a mule deer even in October. I think most people that are concerned are more concerned for the health of the herd they have already shot good bucks. Now they just donāt get to see them or the numbers of deer anymore and it will continue to get worse if we stay on the same path.
Wish we would do a better job of thinning out the WT here in Montana. Gonna make it my mission to shoot a bunch of does this season. Iād really encourage anyone coming out here to get WT b tags instead of muley. They taste better and are pretty damn easy to find all over the state
That population doubles in late Nov. At least in the woods it does.Montana is a big state with a lot of deer and relatively few people, even still. I bet every resident that wants to could hunt deer every year and do it knowing thereās some 4-7 year old deer in their unit with some management.
For me it is both. I can not speak for SW Montana as I have only hunted SE Montana for forty years, but judging by the number of SW Montana plates I see in SE Montana every year it is safe to say that the SW part of the state is not much better.Forgive me for my ignorance (I'm still new), but is the problem that there aren't enough mule deer on public land in Montana or just that there aren't enough trophy mule deer bucks? I see mule deer virtually every time I go out hunting the public lands around here, although not many bucks.
I hear where youāre coming from on that. I guess what Iām saying is if youāre coming to eastern Montana to hunt muley bucks something you can do to help the future of mule deer and take some extra meat home is to pick up a WT b tag instead of a muley b tag. Thereās quite a few whitetails that live in the same habitat as mulies.It's weird man. I would love to hunt WTs in Montana (or Wyoming, or Colorado...) but coming from abundant whitetail hunting and having to go so far makes it difficult to justify over a novel species. Probably how most hunters feel unfortunately.
If I had the time and money to go on multiple trips a year I would be there to help your thinning efforts. Hunting familiar animals in such a wildly different landscape would be big time fun.