Very well said. Over the weekend, my dad took my step mom antelope hunting to the area where I grew up hunting. He hadn’t hunted it in probably 10 years, but he was blown away by how much the hunting pressure had changed. I haven’t looked at permit numbers to see if they have changed much, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they are pretty similar as back when I used to hunt it. It’s likely that hunting pressure has seemingly increased just due to the fact that hunters coming from western MT are taking it more serious. He said he ran into multiple camps, which was unheard of when we used to hunt that area. Finding antelope carcasses next to the trail wasn’t a thing either because most of the people with antelope tags were locals and if they shot something they’d have the entire antelope hanging in their garage. I know a region 7 antelope tag has become harder to come by too. I don’t ever remember not drawing when I used to put in for it. Those western MT residents have just as much of a right to hunt there as the locals, but things are certainly different than they used to be. He said the antelope numbers were terrible too.There’s been so many discussions on deer hunting and management that I’ll stay away from specifics, but something I agree with you on, Doug, that I think about a lot:
Be it hunting or really any outdoor recreation, economics, passions, and many other things, in this rapidly changing West it will be rural locals - demographically a minority but culturally not so - who will be disproportionately affected as their historic and local experiences are diminished and in some cases extirpated by the hordes who travel from more densely populated areas to share in what those rural locals have loved for generations sans the outsiders.