Carnage2011
Well-known member
Ya I just noticed that. That sucks for sure.Not all of it
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Ya I just noticed that. That sucks for sure.Not all of it
Back in the mid 90’ it took 3 years of work from a dedicated group.I can’t even fathom the work that was put in to make those changes.
If you suggest changes in some parts of the states you get laughed at. Much respect to you guys getting it done.Back in the mid 90’ it took 3 years of work from a dedicated group.
Today no way.
Regardless of recreational pressure and population eastern montana doesn’t need to be exploited or be the relief valve for the rest of the state. You can’t have it good over there and pound deer over here if it’s not good enough. I understand your frustration but the decline I’ve seen in the last 30 will continue to get worse and is not sustainable. During hunting season eastern montana public land use would rival any use in western montana. That’s not right. Any cut in season would be welcomed by me.My point is that it doesn't make sense to compare different parts of the state. The Bitterroot gets an unbelievably high amount of recreational pressure and has very few mule deer. Of course the regulations need to be more restrictive in the Bitterroot than on the Custer. You can't just say that making our seasons less restrictive than they were isn't a big deal because it's still more restrictive than other parts of the state.
Does this mean you aren’t going to give me any suggestions on where to find a mule deer?I almost hate to say this, but if these changes go through, I already have my mule deer hunt planned for next year. mtmuley
May be a Clearwater Junction shed hunting based entry... heh!I almost hate to say this, but if these changes go through, I already have my mule deer hunt planned for next year. mtmuley
There's obviously some really disappointing proposals in this (especially with mule deer). That said, I keep thinking to myself when I'm going through these that this could have been A LOT worse, especially with elk. I was not expecting the 900 elk units to go to individual tags, that seems like a very reasonable decision. I very much expected the Lewistown area units to go to general bull hunting with what I was hearing. There are a handful of limited entry mule deer units in Western Montana that are getting much larger also, which I think is a good decision.
It seems like Helena did make a few changes from the proposals submitted by the local bios, but not as many as I feared they would.
I still can't wrap my head around the "Why" for this whole process though. 90% of hunters have ONX and a copy of the regulations on their phones these days. It's very easy to know what unit you're standing in and what the regulations are. All this shuffling for the sake of catering to the lowest denominator just feels like a waste of time and energy for everyone involved. Not to mention how much we're handcuffing our local bios for future management decisions.
If you're commenting on any of these changes you feel strongly about, be blunt and to the point. If there's any nuance at all to your comment they will throw you in to the "indifferent" category rather than support or oppose.
I still can't wrap my head around the "Why" for this whole process though.
While I’m sure there are some shenanigans going on behind the scenes; breaking up the 900 tag is a good thing in my eyes. I’m not going to be upset about something just because Paul Ellis is an advocate for it. We can’t possibly manage the sweet grass hills and bull mountains on the same tag. The FWP is already stating they will push for mandatory reporting.On the 900-20 tags going back to LE individual districts, yeah, it could have been much worse, but reinstating the districts is what the UPOM and Paul Ellis crowd have been pushing for. This allows easier marketing to NR outfitted clients and helps outfitters when it comes to client management through points, etc. The main reason that 900-20 was brought in was to deal with a massive misallocation of harvested bulls in some of those districts as well as spreading out resident hunter pressure. With OTC B tags, and now a bunch of split up districts, I think it makes sense to track this and ensure that the data on harvest is kept. I'm not sure they will this time.
None of this happens in a vaccuum. With the big expansion in requests under the 454 program, increased pressure for transferable licenses, etc, eliminating the 900-20 is a first step towards increasing bull poermits in over-objectiver districts, and if FWP gets their way on getting 505 or other transferable licenses put in place, this could very easily result in resident hunters losing a ton access to lands that hold elk as leases and exclusivity become the standard operating procedure even moreso than currently.
They are still easy to draw just not quite guaranteed. The only thing I can think is the Sweet Grass Hills will likely be easier to draw than the Custer or Highwoods. Therefore the outfitter will have a better chance. However, they still have to draw the general combo tag first.Sorry, I'm not following this. Can you dumb it down? The 900 tags have been very easy to draw up until now. How is it easier for the outfitters now with individual unit tags?
10% of LE permits going into 20 different districts with varying herd objectives that can likely be increased based on "landowner tolerance" makes it easier to increase NR opportunity through LE permits, and especially when you layer the landowner setaside/transferable tag/ outfitter welfare tags on top of it all.Sorry, I'm not following this. Can you dumb it down? The 900 tags have been very easy to draw up until now. How is it easier for the outfitters now with individual unit tags?
Spot On, as usual.10% of LE permits going into 20 different districts with varying herd objectives that can likely be increased based on "landowner tolerance" makes it easier to increase NR opportunity through LE permits, and especially when you layer the landowner setaside/transferable tag/ outfitter welfare tags on top of it all.
Easier to secure more land that way, versus a larger distribution of licenses and LE permits. Those LE permits have been easy for residents to draw up until now. Not as much for NR's. This helps NR's get more LE permits for those areas when objectives go up in districts with high elk numbers and super low public opportunity.
But wouldn't the current set up create a much larger pool of Non-residents for the outfitters to cater to? 10% of the 900 permits is a much larger number than 10% of whatever these individual units will be set at. And they can't increase the 10% without increasing the 90% of residents that will get tags, right?
As with drawn tags. I agree 100% Step further would be selection of Archery or Rifle for each species. I'd add OR traditional muzzleloader as well.I am also a big proponent of limiting people to hunting the unit they draw for elk. If you draw the 447 elk tag them no general hunting for you.
Do you have specific examples of changes they're making in this proposal that will clear up confusion? The vast majority of the changes I'm seeing have to do with the mandate to combine smaller units to create larger ones.
No matter what the NR are still limited to 10% of LE permits though, correct?But that's spread out across all 22 districts, rather than allowing for individual district increases through objective manipulation and smaller increases in permits. I am trying to dig out the data from 2007 or so that showed when we had the individual districts how some of them were 90% NR opportunity for bulls, regardless of the quota system.
And if that’s the case it’s not going to change at all based on us managing by unit. We aren’t going to get any more access to private land…90% of the bulls were killed by nonresidents because they resided on outfitter controlled private land?