cheeser
Well-known member
Special Report: Where’d the deer go? Hunter frustration grows in Minnesota Northwoods
An increasing number of Northern Minnesota deer hunters blame wolves for the thinning herd. Researchers say it's not that simple.
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That explains why all the Minnesotans are coming out every year to finish off all the Montana bucks huhKnow a few people who live up there and the wolves have wiped them out completely and hunters finished off the rest. It's sad.
A buddy of mine has a cabin near Seney and we see a lot of wolf tracks in that area when we are up there hunting, fishing and trapping. Definetely having an impact on deer numbersNorthern Wisconsin gun deer kill numbers were way down as well this year.
I drove north/south across the Upper Penninsula if Michigan yesterday during low-light/dark, I saw x4 deer the entire drive. Craziness.
This is a huge factor.These haven't helped the last couple of years either. Pretty tough for deer to bounce back from this by fall....
Link to reports: https://www.dnr.state.mn.us/mammals/deer/management/statistics.html
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Definitely not in Montana, but no doubt they will be over here looking for them next year.![]()
Special Report: Where’d the deer go? Hunter frustration grows in Minnesota Northwoods
An increasing number of Northern Minnesota deer hunters blame wolves for the thinning herd. Researchers say it's not that simple.www.northernnewsnow.com
I've spent quite a bit of time hunting the Seney refuge and I have never had a more desolate deer hunting experience anywhere - and I've hunted in 8 different counties in the UP in the past 10 years. A shadow of its former self, if you listen to the people who truly knew it in the 90s and earlier. I have been reading quite a bit of the literature on how wolves are more effective hunting off of roads and trails lately (I think inspired by another thread here), and that has 100% been corroborated by my experiences in the upper Midwest, but especially on the refuge. Wolves run the dyke roads that separate the pools while they split up and play the wind, and they can cover the entire 95,000 acre refuge in a matter of a few hours - if that. The roads are perfectly designed for efficient wolf travel, and they take advantage of it.A buddy of mine has a cabin near Seney and we see a lot of wolf tracks in that area when we are up there hunting, fishing and trapping. Definetely having an impact on deer numbers
I hear you. Every time I hear whining about wolves, see a Cheeser thread, or listen to people spout off about “SSS” it makes me more content with just leaving them alone.I'm a pretty big fence rider when it comes to this issue. I see no problem with a wolf/hunting trapping season, but all the false bravado I see from the "smoke a pack day" crowd makes me feel okay with never having a wolf season.
Just blowhards. Have you ever tried to smoke a pack a day? Not anything to worry aboutI'm a pretty big fence rider when it comes to this issue. I see no problem with a wolf/hunting trapping season, but all the false bravado I see from the "smoke a pack day" crowd makes me feel okay with never having a wolf season.
Idk about a pack a day but when Wisconsin opened season they sure wiped the floor with the wolves fast. No way the amount that were killed was even close to what was reported. I agree mostly blowhards but just sayin.Just blowhards. Have you ever tried to smoke a pack a day? Not anything to worry about
Southern WI was down as much as the north. Maybe the warm weather? Can’t blame wolves for everything.A buddy of mine has a cabin near Seney and we see a lot of wolf tracks in that area when we are up there hunting, fishing and trapping. Definetely having an impact on deer numbers
Have you ever tried to smoke a pack a day?