Addicting
Well-known member
If all the elk are on Private and it’s so bad, why has MT sold all its NR licenses the last two years after a price increase and had a waiting list for turned in tags? Asking for a friend....
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If all the elk are on Private and it’s so bad, why has MT sold all its NR licenses the last two years after a price increase and had a waiting list for turned in tags? Asking for a friend....
It does seem simple ... but it's far from. FWP has many diverse pressures ... and then there's the looney legislature!Seems simple ...
If all the elk are on Private and it’s so bad, why has MT sold all its NR licenses the last two years after a price increase and had a waiting list for turned in tags? Asking for a friend....
Seems simple manage elk numbers for the public. If ranchers and farmers are so concerned about elk on there land they can do block management. No extended seasons or shoulder hunts. Or iam I not being logical.
Bliss.. You know the rest. mtmuley
They haven't been part of the solution ever...only the problem. The idiotic FWP for decades didn't limit cow permits to private land only, but pounded the living hell out of the elk on public land.
Then, every biologist in Montana wanders around the State, many that caused this problem, with a dumb/confused look on their face wondering how they're going to "fix" it. They have NO options because they did the worse thing they ever could have...longer seasons, more cow permits, more and more and more pressure on public lands. You don't fix an elk overpopulation problem by concentrating elk harvest on primarily the public land, while creating nice sanctuaries on the private. Has never worked, isn't working now, and never will work.
Fire up the helicopter and get on with the slaughter...bulls first.
If your goal is a legal bull elk, or even a cow on a general license, public land in MT likely ranks at the bottom of the barrel in the west.
The crazy thing is the combo tags were not selling out after the last price increase and now they area again. Time to raise prices even if the hunting has gone downhill.
As for wolves being part of the problem, I tend to agree. About 10 years ago a local rancher told me that it had become impossible to run the elk out of his fields and up in to the timber. He said that you could go out and haze them out of the fields and they would be back in an hour. He has ranched there for many years and never experienced anything like it. He said that you could not force them to live up on the mountain.
This is country that has basically no hunting pressure on the usfs behind it, because of lack of access.
They know the difference between timber and open.
Many just want the "Montana experience"...some think they can beat the crap odds of killing an elk, and some may be hunting on memories. I can tell you that the only reason I buy the NR Native deer combo every year is to hunt with my Dad, Brother, and Nephews...if they didn't live there, I wouldn't buy even that. I haven't bought an elk tag there in several years and have no intentions of buying another until the MTFWP quits treating elk like noxious weeds.
No one said that wolves don't go into open country. Wolves change the way that elk use the land. I believe that bulls tend to still use timbered country more than the cows because they will die if they stay with the cows.