Spent the first two days in this area. It looked great with all the aspens and the water in the creek bottoms. But when you walked around a bit, you saw that there was note enough vegetation left for the mice to make it through the winter. The sheep had hammered the entire mountain.
After two days of seeing pretty much nothing, we had to go on a search mission. We finally found good numbers of deer about 10-12 miles north, which on these roads, was about an hour drive each way.
Talked to some guys who have hunted this mountain for years, always having good luck inn archery season. They were baffled as to where the deer had disappeared to. They had never seen sheep here in archery season before and they attribute the lack of deer to that. I don't know for sure, but I cannot see how a deer would have anything to eat.
As some said, sheep grazing, if done right, can help the range. I would have a hard time imagining this operator was doing the range any favors. Seems he would be a poster child for those critics of public land sheep grazing.
After two days of seeing pretty much nothing, we had to go on a search mission. We finally found good numbers of deer about 10-12 miles north, which on these roads, was about an hour drive each way.
Talked to some guys who have hunted this mountain for years, always having good luck inn archery season. They were baffled as to where the deer had disappeared to. They had never seen sheep here in archery season before and they attribute the lack of deer to that. I don't know for sure, but I cannot see how a deer would have anything to eat.
As some said, sheep grazing, if done right, can help the range. I would have a hard time imagining this operator was doing the range any favors. Seems he would be a poster child for those critics of public land sheep grazing.