Most here know that I see Wyoming as the best example of how private land access models work for big game hunting. I have researched many states in preparation for presentations to Montana's Private Lands-Public Wildlife Committee. In doing so, I came to understand how some states view it more from the hunter and game management perspective and some states, specifically Montana, come to view it as more of a landowner-focused program.
If you want to learn more about the program, here is the link on the Montana FWP website - http://fwp.mt.gov/hunting/hunterAccess/blockman/
My interest in this post is to share ideas that could make Montana's Block Management Program more attractive to Hunt Talk members, knowing most of us are big game hunters, more than we are bird hunters. There are some properties enrolled that have worked with FWP to offer a high quality experience. Yet, my experience is that those are less common and the over-hunted/overcrowded situation is more common. If I was a bird hunter, maybe I would see it differently.
Here are things I found when I gave my presentation to the PLPW Committee five years ago. All of which I would like to see changed to improve the program.
My recommendations will surely cause some landowners to leave the program, as they want to run it how they want. I understand that and accept their decisions to do something else. Yet, a lot of other landowners would likely consider the program if it were operated differently.
These suggestions would likely cause a decrease in bird hunting lands that cost the program a fortune, as many bird hunters hunt multiple properties per day, resulting in many "hunter-days" being paid for when only one "hunter-day" was actually incurred. It would hopefully increase the amount of quality big game lands, the activity that drives the most demand and revenue.
So, please give your thoughts. I want to share this with some folks at FWP, so if it results in any personal mud wrestling, I will remove those comments.
If you want to learn more about the program, here is the link on the Montana FWP website - http://fwp.mt.gov/hunting/hunterAccess/blockman/
My interest in this post is to share ideas that could make Montana's Block Management Program more attractive to Hunt Talk members, knowing most of us are big game hunters, more than we are bird hunters. There are some properties enrolled that have worked with FWP to offer a high quality experience. Yet, my experience is that those are less common and the over-hunted/overcrowded situation is more common. If I was a bird hunter, maybe I would see it differently.
Here are things I found when I gave my presentation to the PLPW Committee five years ago. All of which I would like to see changed to improve the program.
1. Allow the lands enrolled in this program to be used for access to adjacent public lands. Adjacent public lands is a ranking criteria some states use when enrolling lands, making smaller critical lands score well due to the access provided.
2. Allocated funds in proportion to the type of hunting activity from which the money is generated. This could require a bit more accounting and allocation of some joint costs/revenues, but we know how much revenue comes from bird licenses compared to big game licenses. A huge amount of Montana acreage is enrolled as bird hunting lands, with almost no big game value, though the majority of funding for the program comes from big game hunting licenses/interest. Most other states allocate their funds to accomplish access for the activities that are driving the funds. This will allow more enrollment of elk hunting ground/access, good deer hunting grounds/access, and hopefully more places to chase antelope.
3. Make it less about the acreage enrolled and more about the quality of the acreage, the additional public access obtained, and the quality of the experience.
4. Take over the headache from landowners who feel this is a pain in the butt for them. Some landowners want to see the hunters and administer the program themselves, which is fine.
5. Any BMA with restricted slots needs to have those slots filled by online lottery. No "repeat customers" for high-demand properties.
6. Enroll lands for longer-term periods, rather than one-year periods. Enrolling for a five/ten-year period is likely a fraction of the work to enroll the same property five or ten times on an annual basis. It will add some predictability to what properties will be available when people draw their tag and it will allow for property maps to be made available earlier in the year.
7. Increase the cap on payments to landowners to compete with quality hunting lands. When you are a bargain shopper, as current laws make the BMA program, expect to get the lower end of the scale when it comes to quality of lands and quality of experience.
8. Move away from the "hunter-day" payment method. This encourages crazy amounts of use to reach the maximum payment cap. Result is a lot less "management" and a lot more hammering of properties.
My recommendations will surely cause some landowners to leave the program, as they want to run it how they want. I understand that and accept their decisions to do something else. Yet, a lot of other landowners would likely consider the program if it were operated differently.
These suggestions would likely cause a decrease in bird hunting lands that cost the program a fortune, as many bird hunters hunt multiple properties per day, resulting in many "hunter-days" being paid for when only one "hunter-day" was actually incurred. It would hopefully increase the amount of quality big game lands, the activity that drives the most demand and revenue.
So, please give your thoughts. I want to share this with some folks at FWP, so if it results in any personal mud wrestling, I will remove those comments.