AlaskaHunter
Well-known member
I use my ATV exclusively for snow plowing. Never leaves the neighborhood.
I avoid any area that is accessible by ATV as I want to get away from
competition and I've been successful by doing that.
Sweat-equity pays off in terms of not hearing another shot and not having some Bubba ruin a hunt. To me the wilderness experience is more important than killing and animal, but the likelihood of success in terms of killing an animal goes up tremendously when I get away from the ATV hunters.
All the trails in my boreal forest neighborhood were hikeable with leather boots 30 years ago. Now they require waders to cross the bottoms...
In much of Alaska the permafrost is insulated by an organic mat,
when ATVs damage that insulation, a negative feedback occurs of
quickly thawing permafrost, leading to ponding, and the water conducts summer heat,
leading to more thawing permafrost. An area that was hikable soon becomes a peat pond.
It takes a lifetime for that damage to recover.
I avoid any area that is accessible by ATV as I want to get away from
competition and I've been successful by doing that.
Sweat-equity pays off in terms of not hearing another shot and not having some Bubba ruin a hunt. To me the wilderness experience is more important than killing and animal, but the likelihood of success in terms of killing an animal goes up tremendously when I get away from the ATV hunters.
All the trails in my boreal forest neighborhood were hikeable with leather boots 30 years ago. Now they require waders to cross the bottoms...
In much of Alaska the permafrost is insulated by an organic mat,
when ATVs damage that insulation, a negative feedback occurs of
quickly thawing permafrost, leading to ponding, and the water conducts summer heat,
leading to more thawing permafrost. An area that was hikable soon becomes a peat pond.
It takes a lifetime for that damage to recover.