Gerald Martin
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2009
- Messages
- 8,643
In region 1 the public land is mountainous, heavily timbered and completely unpopulated. The private land offers pockets of sanctuary on unhuntable property and the elk have learned where they are not harassed by hunters. Wolves in this area learned quickly that interaction with humans in the lower elevations proves unhealthy for them and stick to higher elevations. Lots of gated and ungated roads make it easy for them to cover large distances. I think wolves in this area kill more deer than elk but they are very effective at killing the elk they do find wintering in the mountains. (Probably a higher percentage of bulls than cows in the winter)
The scattered herds in the valley are growing in size but the bull to cow ratio is skewed since most 2 1/2 bulls that stick with the herd are shot as soon as they cross off of rancher Bob's 250 acres on to Billy or John's 20 acres during hunting season.
Our county's human population is growing, efficiency of bows and ability to shoot longer distances in archery season, long range hunting with cross canyon shots of 600-800 yards becoming more and more common, fragmented lower elevation wintering habitat, wolves, and hunters who refuse to limit themselves in any way because "we want to kill an elk even if the herd can't handle it. We've always done it this way..."
The bright spot from FWP's perspective is Unit 121 is not over objective so I don't see much attention being focused on NW Montana anytime soon.
We have lots of public land and good access. Anyone want to ship some of those over-objective cows north?
The scattered herds in the valley are growing in size but the bull to cow ratio is skewed since most 2 1/2 bulls that stick with the herd are shot as soon as they cross off of rancher Bob's 250 acres on to Billy or John's 20 acres during hunting season.
Our county's human population is growing, efficiency of bows and ability to shoot longer distances in archery season, long range hunting with cross canyon shots of 600-800 yards becoming more and more common, fragmented lower elevation wintering habitat, wolves, and hunters who refuse to limit themselves in any way because "we want to kill an elk even if the herd can't handle it. We've always done it this way..."
The bright spot from FWP's perspective is Unit 121 is not over objective so I don't see much attention being focused on NW Montana anytime soon.
We have lots of public land and good access. Anyone want to ship some of those over-objective cows north?