SwaggyD
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2022
- Messages
- 1,699
That’s a wall hanger for your Washington Facebook bros!!Don’t derail the thread. This is about mismanagement. Only anecdotal observations that support the rant are allowed.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
That’s a wall hanger for your Washington Facebook bros!!Don’t derail the thread. This is about mismanagement. Only anecdotal observations that support the rant are allowed.
You must have had a sip of the kool-aid. I would put the knowledge shared on this thread up against any of the fwp staff.Don’t derail the thread. This is about mismanagement. Only anecdotal observations that support the rant are allowed.
#godblessmontanaI think Ontarios post beautifully highlights the fact that shooting a 130” buck during peak rut is probably one of the easiest achievements of western hunting.
We are not going to shoot our way out. FWP may try, but it won’t work.I would like to think you are wrong, but the realist in me says you are right.
The more we pressure accessible land the more restrictive access to private land will become.
More people will get discouraged with the quality of public and pony up the money for a private lease.
More landowners will say not on my place any more to the slaughter and restrict access.
I don't know the answer to CWD, but I am confident we are not going to shoot our way out of it unless we use helicopters
That strategy would require that some bucks live past the age of four. No way in hell are we going to let that happen in a state that prides itself on opportunity.We are not going to shoot our way out. FWP may try, but it won’t work.
Jason Snavely has an article on CWD (google it, post it on here, it’s beyond my IT capacity). His research shows there are deer resistant to CWD, and living past 4 yrs of age in captivity. As I’ve long suspected, there are deer that will be resistant and eventually immune to the disease. Let nature take its course, the prions are here already. We know they aren’t going away….Let NATURE take its course.
Let nature take its course, the prions are here already. We know they aren’t going away….Let NATURE take its course.
Generous, but point is very solid....highlights the fact that shooting a 130” buck during peak rut is probably one of the easiest achievements of western hunting. .
This isn't new, they've known about this for a while. It's not as straight forward as one might think, though. Deer with the less susceptible phenotypes still get the disease, still shed infectious material, and still die of the disease. Living longer with the disease equates to shedding infectious material on the landscape longer. Plus, deer with those particular genes aren't all that common in the wild.We are not going to shoot our way out. FWP may try, but it won’t work.
Jason Snavely has an article on CWD (google it, post it on here, it’s beyond my IT capacity). His research shows there are deer resistant to CWD, and living past 4 yrs of age in captivity. As I’ve long suspected, there are deer that will be resistant and eventually immune to the disease. Let nature take its course, the prions are here already. We know they aren’t going away….Let NATURE take its course.
Due to very mild weather (end of November and I'm still hunting birds in shirt sleeves), I think the rut had only just started. The first day hunting I saw no bucks with the does and fawns, more than twenty total. Even the little 2x1 was by himself. All three bucks I saw the second day were alone. However, my brother said the big one that walked by the vehicle had his nose in the air. Correction: the big whitetail buck spotted at daybreak of day one was bedded with a doe.I think Ontarios post beautifully highlights the fact that shooting a 130” buck during peak rut is probably one of the easiest achievements of western hunting. Therefore, with an increase in hunting pressure, wolves, grizzlies and more and more houses being built in winter ranges, FWP may need to think about changing something up. I think it was a profound post.
Because CWD is a very slow-acting disease. it takes years for an infected deer to show symptoms. We're harvesting the deer before they can die of it. Bluetongue/EHD outbreaks occur in late summer and you see massive, sudden die-offs.What I don't understand is if there's a CWD epidemic, why aren't my bird dogs finding bone piles everywhere like the blue tongue a couple years ago?
Sometimes the answer to the question is really simple. Like, maybe there are not many bucks left?Due to very mild weather (end of November and I'm still hunting birds in shirt sleeves), I think the rut had only just started. The first day hunting I saw no bucks with the does and fawns, more than twenty total.
If I were to hypothetically infect 100 deer with EHD within a small window of time, say a week. The ones that would die (since some have immunity) would all die in about a week Post infection. In 1 weeks time they're not going to get very far and most will come to a water source since they'll be feverish. This would make it relatively easy to find where these deer died.What I don't understand is if there's a CWD epidemic, why aren't my bird dogs finding bone piles everywhere like the blue tongue a couple years ago?
There are people that believe the world is flat. Some of those same people also think shooting a "nice" 2.5yo buck in the peak of the rut means the deer hunting is just fine.
12 Year olds, I get it. Adults, every year? If that's the case, something is wrong with what we're teaching people about hunting in my opinion.but there are people who are genuinely happy with shooting any deer and I believe that is and should be fine.
12 Year olds, I get it. Adults, every year? If that's the case, something is wrong with what we're teaching people about hunting in my opinion.