Pucky Freak
Well-known member
If I want to shoot a duck in IA licenses fees and stamps total $71.50 ($20 license & the rest is habitat). It prices a modest percentage of persons out of the pursuit, but I’m fine with that, because if you really value waterfowl hunting and habitat, you will pay the price. I chose to do so when I was making $13/hr working part-time in 2006. I think the cost is appropriate considering the necessary habitat requirements for waterfowl. Similar stamps for trout, etc. exist in other states.
I think it’s important for resident hunters to advocate for habitat fees for themselves, as this can/could potentially protect a national public land hunting legacy. If NR’s are inevitably going to fund the F&G agency that’s fine, but at least choose to protect the treasure in your own backyard. Mule deer is the first species that comes to mind, but maybe there are others it could make sense for too. I’d rather see a MT $25 mule deer habitat stamp than have some poorly administered federal oversight.
I partially disagree with EA on the need for landowner incentives for cervid conservation. I think a “stick” approach is more in order. E.g. the “my elk on my land” mentality is met with a grassroots push to get a state constitutional amendment declaring wild native animals an eternal public trust not to be bought, sold, traded, or transferred on any terms. That’s an ambitious goal, but I’d like to see us shoot for something like that now vs. 20 years from now when there is even less support.
I think it’s important for resident hunters to advocate for habitat fees for themselves, as this can/could potentially protect a national public land hunting legacy. If NR’s are inevitably going to fund the F&G agency that’s fine, but at least choose to protect the treasure in your own backyard. Mule deer is the first species that comes to mind, but maybe there are others it could make sense for too. I’d rather see a MT $25 mule deer habitat stamp than have some poorly administered federal oversight.
I partially disagree with EA on the need for landowner incentives for cervid conservation. I think a “stick” approach is more in order. E.g. the “my elk on my land” mentality is met with a grassroots push to get a state constitutional amendment declaring wild native animals an eternal public trust not to be bought, sold, traded, or transferred on any terms. That’s an ambitious goal, but I’d like to see us shoot for something like that now vs. 20 years from now when there is even less support.