shoots-straight
Well-known member
That's good comedy right there.
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I will see if I can find the picture but have found a place that an outfitter sets up his wall tent. There is attached to a pine a sign that says this spot is used by outfitter X and shall not be used for a campsite by anyone in this area.We do not define seeing someone in the field as a competitor but as another person sharing those treasures with each other.
I cut and pasted the above sentence from the e-mail. There must be a few outfitters who did not get the message.
More than once and by more than one outfitter, witnessed by me, has herded elk away from public land hunters to their benefit.
I did like that they only want one early bite of the apple.
An email from one of the people who leads the trade industry group pushing this bill.
Sounds like he is "double-dog" daring me.There is attached to a pine a sign that says this spot is used by outfitter X and shall not be used for a campsite by anyone in this area.
addicting, this will not make room for more outfitters. Outfitters are already limited by NCHU(net client hunting use) on private land, BLM, state lands, and FS special use permits(I don't outfit on FS) only so many days/permit holders/NCHU out there, limiting us. So there will not be any growth, as the fear mongers would have you believe.
Special interest groups greasing the hands of politicians. You scratch my back I'll scratch yours and we'll both get rich. Old as time itself.I have a hard time ever seeing an example of where outfitters should be guaranteed tags.
Nailed it.Special interest groups greasing the hands of politicians. You scratch my back I'll scratch yours and we'll both get rich. Old as time itself.
Yeah, a bite that weighs in at 60% of the appleI did like that they only want one early bite of the apple.
This was happening back with the old outfitter licenses. If this passes it will be happening ten fold. Will not be long and outfitters will be using the entire 60%.One part that has been missing from this discussion is the "behind the scenes politics." I'll try my best to explain it.
There are some very large non-resident landowners in Montana who are not accustomed to having to stand in line with the unwashed masses, a/k/a the basket of deplorables.
These non-resident landowners and their non-resident friends have had a harder time drawing tags to hunt their big properties, due to these pesky peasants applying for this same pool of tags and now you actually need a preference point or two to draw this Montana tag. Yeah, these landowners can go in the landowner draw we have in Montana, but that is not as wide-ranging as is needed for the amounts of family and friends some of these landowners grew accustomed to hosting.
Many of these non-resident landowners, their spouses, family members, and business associates have made the maximum allowed donations to many of the Montana legislators who are involved in this effort (quick Google searches can show this information in your state). Those maxed out donations come with a lot of strings. One of the strings is to make sure these non-residents can get a tag for them, family, and friends, even if they have to enter into a deal with an outfitter.
This is an influential group behind the scenes asking for this. These non-resident landowners are quiet and they have their agents doing their lobbying. They are smart and know the current optics of non-resident landowners seeking more elk tags in this environment.
The outfitters benefit to a high degree and they are the face of this effort in public, as seen by their large presence in the Capitol to lobby on this bill. Given who has been doing the calling behind the scenes on behalf of their clients, there is little doubt that this effort is being encouraged by the wealthy non-resident landowner who dislikes being in the same line as the workin' folks.
Political debts get repaid. Just a matter of who pays the bill, in this case, the self-guided non-resident gets the largest share of the tab.
I mean in their defense when I ask my wife for a bite of her ice cream I fully intend on taking the entire top off that thing!Yeah, a bite that weighs in at 60% of the apple
Apparently MOGA and WYOGA have a direct phone line for strategy sessions.An email from one of the people who leads the trade industry group pushing this bill.
I've had this same experience just shows how mismanaged that agency truly is. I personally have spent a fortune in MT over the years all DIY. Not to mention a small fortune I left behind in threeforks at that wonderful restaurant.This is sarcasm right?
I keep missing their call but they called me as recently as last week to ask about my elk hunting from last year.
I turned my tag in for a refund in late July.
My other point is more of a question: Why are Montana outfitters unable to successfully operate in a system where clients might not draw every year when Arizona outfitters can? They seem to have figured out a business model to account for the draw system when it usually takes many years to acquire a tag. For Montana outfitters to state they simply cannot handle the “unstable” situation of a prospective client not drawing a tag seems like complete nonsense. Are the outfitters in Arizona tougher? Are they better at running their businesses?