Bigjay73
Well-known member
Not that I am okay with how this went down, but I love how the original story claimed that there were 36-48 unclaimed elk, and in the end , there was actually 1. God bless the internet
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You know, in these days in Montana, with businesses closing right and left, none of us knows who among these people were doing it to feed their families too. Many of us here are unaffected as we are well off, or in jobs where the money continues to flow; government workers, teachers, etc.Not a fair comparison. The tribes very survival was reliant on the food they could kill. Nothing really sporty about it when its a life or death situation. Comparing it to these yahoos isn't fair.
Thing is all the folks bashing it should be bashing policy. Objectives are off and the BMA had a come one come all sign in book.Elk, cheap beer and whiskey will bring out the worst in a man. it appears that the Internet could be added to that list...
I wish I could agree with you Longbow, but I saw a similar incident back in 2014 between Helena and Townsend.You know, in these days in Montana, with businesses closing right and left, none of us knows who among these people were doing it to feed their families too. Many of us here are unaffected as we are well off, or in jobs where the money continues to flow; government workers, teachers, etc.
So, no it's not sporting, and yes, it's a black eye on hunting, but, according to the Great Falls Tribune, "Still, the wildlife department determined that most of the hunters involved in the incident did not break the law. A killed elk went unclaimed and two killed elks were confiscated from hunters who were cited. The three were donated to a local food bank."
If I had a couple of hungry kids, no money in the bank, and my job disappeared, I'd kill game any legal way I could, and so would most.
This year is a little different. Maybe be a little slower to judge.
And GF Tribune, note that the plural of elk is not elks.
A swing and a miss. Yes is was sarcasm. Wolves, teaching their young how to hunt when they kill more game than they need.I may be naive and miss the sarcasm, but I don’t get this comment at all. Are you suggesting that we should not be teaching youth to hunt big game? And that this is the reason for some stupid poachers, who we don’t know anything about yet, shooting up a herd of elk?
Wasn't really talking about 2014; I have seen this too from the parking lot at a ranch where the elk were clustered. I didn't like it then and don't like it now BUT this year is different and I just think we should cut people a little slack. It's fine if you disagree and I certainly respect your overall longterm view as it mirrors mine.I wish I could agree with you Longbow, but I saw a similar incident back in 2014 between Helena and Townsend.
click here to read the helenair article from 2014
A herd of elk on the valley floor moving through a checkerboard of private, block, and state land. Houses off in the distance in every direction. Along White's Gulch, the road that seperated districts where cows could be harvested, a firing squad of cow tag holders. Back at the Block sign-in box a line of trucks waiting their turn to sign in. Economically, 2014 was a good year.
This situation in Sulphur and other examples is more about moral and ethical decay. We see it in lots of places but when it shows up in hunting it becomes glaring and for good reason. It is also about elk management. That central area of MT has long had an elk over population issue. It's that area of the state that specifically lead to the acceptance of shoulder season hunting as a viable management strategy. I for one hold a B tag down in Sulphur just for that second chance to put some meat in the freezer if I'm still holding my general after Thanksgiving weekend. Cell phones are also at issue. Certainly the cell carriers know who's where, who called who, and who subsequently showed up to the scene. Can't go pulling cell phone records on everyone, but maybe those who get cited should?
I don't know the answer....but I do fear the multiple repercussions. Often times these block mgmt parcels have the owners home nearby. Why put your land back in the block system if there is a probability of a bullet entering your home? Of course, there are the animal rights people that love to embrace this stuff and blow it up even when it sounds like the vast majority followed the rules. Nothing good comes from this.
Expensive beer and whiskey can do it too along with money (the love of), greed, jealousy,prejudice, not to mention plain old ignorance. The internet lets up voice an opinion before we think it out.Elk, cheap beer and whiskey will bring out the worst in a man. it appears that the Internet could be added to that list...
How was it safe ?! 100 people !!!The more I visit this post, the more I wonder what the complaint is. Which hunters were the unethical ones? Was it the 2nd truckload, the 5th, 10th? How many of us on the last day we were able to hunt would have passed up on filling a freezer with a cow standing out in a ranch that we could safely, legally kill? What is the ultimate point of a hunting license? Its to kill something isn't it? Thats want happened here, the vast majority of which was done legally apparently. Is it the type of hunt I go looking for? No, but who am I to tell others how and where to hunt. Now you can argue that it may not have been a safe environment, but unless we were there, can we be certain? This sounds like we need to look closer at the laws and regulations more so than the hunters.
You may be right, I wasn't there, couldn't say.How was it safe ?! 100 people !!!