Carnage2011
Well-known member
One thing that I think would be interesting is to know when deer are harvested. I don’t think mandatory reporting will be some kind of magic wand like many on here do, but if a hunter had to report on the day of harvest we could get some good data.
I keep reading on here that Everyone here wants to shorten seasons. How short? Michigan learned from their reporting requirements that the vast majority of their harvest is in the first two days of the season. So where do we see an impact if we shorten seasons? Do we just make the season two days long? If it’s longer than that, are we gaining much or just appeasing the public?
Montana’s deer population was 385k in 2017. That’s the highest of any point since 2006. It was the lowest around 2012. It’s fairly easy to see that most of the time these numbers are directly related to the weather conditions leading up to that specific time frame.
I’d love to see more mature bucks on the landscape, but I think most of the suggestions are just a bandaid. With Montana’s population rising and habitat being infringed on more and more, we are going to end up at a statewide LE model at some
Point. Might be 30 years but that’s where it will head. I don’t think shortening seasons will magically make people eat more tags. If anything I think hunters may get less picky due to less time allotted. I definitely understand the idea of shifting seasons out of the rut.
Hunttalk has some very knowledgeable guys, but as I’ve said before, we don’t make up the majority of Montana hunters. Montana hunters want long seasons and I guarantee FWP isn’t going to make any kind of significant changes to our current structure. After being on the elk management citizens advisory group I was asked by someone from FWP what my thoughts were. I explained that we had some good discussions but it was very evident to me that the majority of Montana hunters are happy with what they have today.
And before someone says “it’s not about what people want, it’s about the resource,” FWP manages the resource for the people of Montana. We aren’t in jeopardy of the resource going extinct and people value long seasons over mature bucks.
I keep reading on here that Everyone here wants to shorten seasons. How short? Michigan learned from their reporting requirements that the vast majority of their harvest is in the first two days of the season. So where do we see an impact if we shorten seasons? Do we just make the season two days long? If it’s longer than that, are we gaining much or just appeasing the public?
Montana’s deer population was 385k in 2017. That’s the highest of any point since 2006. It was the lowest around 2012. It’s fairly easy to see that most of the time these numbers are directly related to the weather conditions leading up to that specific time frame.
I’d love to see more mature bucks on the landscape, but I think most of the suggestions are just a bandaid. With Montana’s population rising and habitat being infringed on more and more, we are going to end up at a statewide LE model at some
Point. Might be 30 years but that’s where it will head. I don’t think shortening seasons will magically make people eat more tags. If anything I think hunters may get less picky due to less time allotted. I definitely understand the idea of shifting seasons out of the rut.
Hunttalk has some very knowledgeable guys, but as I’ve said before, we don’t make up the majority of Montana hunters. Montana hunters want long seasons and I guarantee FWP isn’t going to make any kind of significant changes to our current structure. After being on the elk management citizens advisory group I was asked by someone from FWP what my thoughts were. I explained that we had some good discussions but it was very evident to me that the majority of Montana hunters are happy with what they have today.
And before someone says “it’s not about what people want, it’s about the resource,” FWP manages the resource for the people of Montana. We aren’t in jeopardy of the resource going extinct and people value long seasons over mature bucks.