I'm old enough to remember the MT BHA board supporting a legislatively mandated muzzleloader season in December in order to preserve a few days of archery season. I wish they would have put forth this same fervent dedication and time into fighting that bill.Which is probably why a 3rd party hired professional is more likely to give good data than someone with a vested interest in an outcome, or taking 10 minutes to do it in their basement. And proponents have suddenly gone quite quiet when it comes to the sketchiest data they provided and were relying heavily upon: "hunter days" which are incredibly speculative at best.
Which then, of course, brings us back to a point made much earlier in this ever-growing thread: what does this bill actually do, and who actually benefits? It is pretty clear now that it doesn't really help sportsmen in any meaningful way. And I certainly can't buy the new argument that by giving the opposition what they want for nothing in return, the opposition will suddenly stop asking for more. That's not how the world works. Once the door is opened it can't be closed.
More than anything, this has all gone to show that by advancing a bill prematurely and without the full support of the coalition behind it, this was incredibly reckless and exposed a weakness in the sporting community. Someone pointed it out earlier in this thread, and it is very true. We are all no doubt the laughing stock of the UPOMs of the world.