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Its transferable bull tags. Anything less will be non sufficient.Landowners are certainly not all the same, and it is hard to find solutions given that variability, but it was pretty clear from the rancher/outfitter that the issue is money. I feel like these questions need to be asked/answered of those in that category...
What $ amount is adequate compensation to feed these elk annually?
What $ amount would it take for you to allow limited cow elk hunting?
What $ amount would it take for you to join BM and fully open to the general public?
Again, not saying its a great idea but a thought: If you cut all that 100%, what is the annual saves to the state of Montana. What if you took that money instead and actually bought up land for sale instead? Can get profit off it by leasing it just like other state lands and its now open to the public should Montana continue to let state land be open to hunting and fishing. Lots of willing sellers of land over 100 acres across Montana on zillow. Just seems partially silly to me to "pay rent" every year as a state for a program that many don't like anyways when you could instead "buy" and turn hopefully some profit off of it.I know the land owner pieces are vastly larger out west so maybe this isn't quite as logical of an argument in the state of Montana but I have talked with a few landowners here that complain about the deer populations and the ag kill tags they get or the compensation they get for crop damage and/or allowing public access. I've asked why they just don't build a taller fence or make it electric and just keep the deer off their property. They always beat around the answer but basically they don't want to actually lose the deer from their land because it provides $$$ to them and it isn't actually a nuisance. Guessing its about the same response you would get from them.
I'm not saying this is a good idea but think about this: What if you cut the ties 100%. Remove all incentives for having elk on their land and how many landowners do you think would change what they are doing now? I'm guessing the lease price they get from the outfitters to use their ranch or the $$$ they are getting directly from clients to use their ranch for hunting is plenty enough. Otherwise don't you think that they would be looking at creative ways to just keep them off? Heck just hanging blaze orange rags on each fence post might just be enough to deter them from crossing.
I agree, for that person at least. I doubt there is anything that will get that group sufficiently satisfied enough to join BM. But until FWP asks the question directly, we will keep getting videos suggesting buying the ranch donuts and helping with fences. I can also acknowledge that doing those things will greatly improve individual relationships, but so will simply following rules, stop ripping up wet roads, closing gates, and generally not being an a-hole hunter. I give the guy credit for admitting it is about money and saying it on tape. We as hunters need to admit that the actions of some of us have caused the real problem.Its transferable bull tags. Anything less will be non sufficient.
Watch.
Big government is bad. Every acquisition is a fight. The guy auditioning for the role as future Governor is adamantly opposed to new acquisitions (unless, of course, the Feds are required to divest land to the states).What if you took that money instead and actually bought up land for sale instead?
Looks like the works already been doneLandowners are certainly not all the same, and it is hard to find solutions given that variability, but it was pretty clear from the rancher/outfitter that the issue is money. I feel like these questions need to be asked/answered of those in that category...
What $ amount is adequate compensation to feed these elk annually?
What $ amount would it take for you to allow limited cow elk hunting?
What $ amount would it take for you to join BM and fully open to the general public?
1. Thanks for the poetry lesson, I had only read that poem once before, and clearly fell into the same group as the masses, where over time I only remembered that one line, and assigned an incorrect interpretation to the poem.Robert Frosts' poem Mending Wall introduced the quote "Good Fences Make Good Neighbors" and is his second most misquoted poem (The Road Not Taken being the first), because most people stop at that quote and don't read further into it.
In the poem, the speaker talks about how every year him and his neighbor meet at the fence and rebuild the gaps caused by weather and hunters (yup!). The poet never brings it up to his neighbor, but wonders to himself why they keep rebuilding the fence, because it is between a pine wood and an apple orchard and won't cause any problems. Yet the neighbor is insistent that "good fences make good neighbors" without any justification other than that it is what his father taught him and a stubborn refusal to change.
To this day people say that line from the poem not realizing the poem they are quoting is mocking it. Good fences don't make good neighbors. Building walls is not the way to solve the problems we have. Common ground isn't common if it has a fence through it.*
Can you explain to me why a landowner should be compensated for feeding elk? I understand the price tag is high to feed elk, but why should they be compensated? When you buy land, those kind of things come with the purchase. Maybe there should be some sort of insurance? There is an easy solution and that is working with hunters and FWP to get the elk problem resolved. If you don't want to use the tools available, then landowners should bear the cost.Landowners are certainly not all the same, and it is hard to find solutions given that variability, but it was pretty clear from the rancher/outfitter that the issue is money. I feel like these questions need to be asked/answered of those in that category...
What $ amount is adequate compensation to feed these elk annually?
What $ amount would it take for you to allow limited cow elk hunting?
What $ amount would it take for you to join BM and fully open to the general public?
That is pretty close to a yes. If hazing elk actually worked there would be much less of an elk issue. Just about every landowner that has an elk problem has tried it. Works at first, but it doesn't take long and the elk you haze off the alfalfa at sundown are back at ten o'clock. Private land elk are not like the public land elk most on this site are hunting. They become habituated to human activity as most of the time that activity is no harm, no foul. They are not going to stand around if they see or smell you, but they will be back after dark. You don't really get them to leave unless some of the herd is getting shot.Do landowners not believe that the pressure those hunters put on the herd is still helpful to getting elk off the property?
Take a look at what @Big Fin posted and the outfitting land owner in the vidso essentially makes the same point.Can you explain to me why a landowner should be compensated for feeding elk? I understand the price tag is high to feed elk, but why should they be compensated? When you buy land, those kind of things come with the purchase. Maybe there should be some sort of insurance? There is an easy solution and that is working with hunters and FWP to get the elk problem resolved. If you don't want to use the tools available, then landowners should bear the cost.
I’m not saying they should, but that is what was implied in the video. The guy said it was about money. I want to know what his price is. (Hint: given he makes his money as an outfitter more than a rancher, I would bet there isn’t a price- for him).Can you explain to me why a landowner should be compensated for feeding elk? I understand the price tag is high to feed elk, but why should they be compensated? When you buy land, those kind of things come with the purchase. Maybe there should be some sort of insurance? There is an easy solution and that is working with hunters and FWP to get the elk problem resolved. If you don't want to use the tools available, then landowners should bear the cost.
YES! Whatever happened to the longstanding principles of the CODE OF THE WEST? It historically has been that the blessings of man's ownership of property with wildlife habitat also included appreciation, but especially a requisite tolerance, of wildlife on the property.When you buy land, those kind of things come with the purchase.
AgreeThe tone of the piece is about being good neighbors. If the goal is to understand the issue in it's entirety, then being able to empathize with someone else's perspective is mission critical to finding the best solution for the problem.
The dollar is the core to this entire issue. The dollar amount is zero. Recall from the video what the BM landowner said. He said back in the past you could go hunting anywhere you wanted. That's because no dollar amount was placed on game. Once outfitting and the commercialization of hunting happened, landowners stopped allowing access since they think they should be reimbursed for "their elk". We'll, the elk don't belong to them. They belong to all of us. If they want help regulating number they need to work with us or live with the hay burning, fence ruining consequences.I’m not saying they should, but that is what was implied in the video. The guy said it was about money. I want to know what his price is. (Hint: given he makes his money as an outfitter more than a rancher, I would bet there isn’t a price- for him).
Hunters want more elk to hunt. They don’t want to “fix” the elk problem. A growing number of landowners don’t want to fix it either- celebrity landowners, those that outfit or lease to outfitters, billionaires like the Wilks. I think BM is trying to help the traditional rancher, and there are fewer of them every year. And even they increasingly don’t want to deal with the problems hunters cause any more than they want to deal with the problems elk cause. So what is the $ amount?