Was wondering how this made it this far along without a peep from you LOL.....
There were bass to catch and beers to drink.
We didn't have any pig wrestling like youse guys.
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Was wondering how this made it this far along without a peep from you LOL.....
Name: david stringer
Email: [email protected]
Comments: hunting wolves? 500 yards. Your quite the hunter. Pathetic. Whose the asshole randy who said "if you hunt, you hunt everything. Ya i guided in alaska for 14 years. We dont hunt such a limited animal. Keep your shit off our network. I work now for the company that carries your so called hunting show. We will see for how long.
Randy,
Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks biologist Craig Jourdonnais (Missoula office) is both an avid elk hunter and resident expert on wolves here in western Montana. His duties include counting elk & deer and calculating cow/calf ratios, and his data is used to manage wildlife and set hunting quotas. He also writes an occasional related editorial for local newspapers. Craig tries to walk the thin line between predator & prey species management from a biologist’s standpoint, but the decline in game numbers he reports can only be described as grim. He is a valuable resource who would add considerable credibility to any discussion about wolves, wolf management and their effect on deer & elk populations. I suggest spending a couple hours with him to gain a more complete perspective for wolf impacts on wildlife management.
In fact, an interview with Craig would make a tremendous hour long program for the Sportsman channel. BT
I soooo hope you shoot a wolf in AlaskaYou suppose I have to worry that GCI, the biggest cable carrier in Alaska, is going to take Sportsman Channel and On Your Own Adventures off their program packages, just because their employee, David has hurt feelings over Critter making a great shot on a wolf?
Last I looked, wolves were not "a limited animal" in Alaska and where I am going moose hunting, I can shoot one for the price of a $30 tag.
Bee Tee:
Craig and I have known each other for a long time. He was based in Region Three before going to the 'Root.
This is not a science story. The science became moot once we met the recovery population objectives in 1999.
Since that time, it is a cultural story, a social conflict. It is about rural culture v. urban culture, conservationist v. environmentalist, almost like the same disputes between Roosevelt and Muir over one hundred years ago.
My goal was to show the side of our culture, our values, our priorities. A side you will never see on big media. A side that we all know is what has conserved the great places of the west that can support these species.
If it was a science story, I would have left it to PBS. They could have scientist from each side. In my mind, and the mind of the three scientists I talked to, this is a human story, not a science topic.
.....If it was a science story, I would have left it to PBS. They could have scientist from each side. In my mind, and the mind of the three scientists I talked to, this is a human story, not a science topic.
You're correct in that this has become a cultural/political debate, but science can provide the credibility necessary to move opinions, if moving opinions is important to saving or preserving the future of elk hunting in Montana. Preaching to the choir isn't enough.
Here are a couple of futures I see for the next decade.... 1- Hunters acquiesce, and elk hunting fades to a memory in large parts of Montana. Equibrilium is reached where few elk and few wolves share the landscape. 2- Hunters take wolf management more seriously....
In 1992, I participated in a January cow elk hunt in the exact same area as where you killed the wolf. From just one spotting location, we could see literally thousands of elk with a spotting scope on the foothills above the valley floor. BT
Randy, maybe you should forward this email to his superiors at that station so they can see what a great professional they have working for them.
The big problem is having a format in which to frame the debate or even present the story. The management side of the story has not and will not be presented through the non-hunting public media outlets.
I feel it is the Shiras moose that is at the greatest danger presently and the window for recovery is closing everyday. I don't think we have another fifteen years of experimenting.
Randy's episode is the first that I am aware of that has even made the airwaves presenting the urgent need for wolf management.