BuzzH
Well-known member
Yes, back on track, this Wyoming proposal needs to go away.Sorry Jeff, back to task force blunderings.
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Yes, back on track, this Wyoming proposal needs to go away.Sorry Jeff, back to task force blunderings.
I guess if you can only have one of the limited quota tags, whitetail or mule deer, not both it would affect you. As it is now we can have both but if this passes you have to choose which to hunt from what I gather.I am one of the few people willing to speak up in favor of this proposal. I want the opportunity to apply for a limited quota whitetail tag and a limited quota mule deer tag, just like I apply for elk, and moose, and antelope, and everything else separately.
All I know for certain is that mule deer and whitetail deer are two separate species of wildlife. Everything else that has been described here is purely speculation and hyperbole. Having a whitetail deer tag in my pocket or not, will have exactly zero impact on whether I kill a mule deer.
As I understand it, you could draw a type 1 mule deer and type 1 whitetail. They would be as different as antelope and elk are now. I think gen whitetail and gen mule deer would/could also be two separate tags.I guess if you can only have one of the limited quota tags, whitetail or mule deer, not both it would affect you. As it is now we can have both but if this passes you have to choose which to hunt from what I gather.
If folks have to choose between mule deer and whitetails most will choose mule deer and those licenses will be harder to draw or have more pressure on the general areas.
Am I wrong about this proposal ? Sounds like to me they want to do away with Type 3 whitetail licenses and make them Type 1s so we have to choose which species to hunt.
With splitting deer licenses, each species would be managed entirely separate. That given, a hunter could apply for both. Obviously, that would put more applicants in each pool, making already low odds type 1 tags even harder to draw and the present type 3 whitetail seeing a drastic decrease in drawing odds.(@appaloosa speculation maybe, but let's be realistic) Also, a hunter could hold two general tags if unsuccessful in the drawing. One for each species.I guess if you can only have one of the limited quota tags, whitetail or mule deer, not both it would affect you. As it is now we can have both but if this passes you have to choose which to hunt from what I gather.
If folks have to choose between mule deer and whitetails most will choose mule deer and those licenses will be harder to draw or have more pressure on the general areas.
Am I wrong about this proposal ? Sounds like to me they want to do away with Type 3 whitetail licenses and make them Type 1s so we have to choose which species to hunt.
I believe it is all but dead by design now. I think it was only a temporary group? I may be wrong!!Any way to promote public comment to do away with this WTF ?
Thanks JM for spreading the word.
True in Colorado there are no combo tags. South Dakota has combo tags. Probably better for revenue to separate the two.Colorado has a pile of whitetail-only tags for units east of I-25, and even for a dozen or so units west of 25. I guess I don't understand your reasoning for why this is bad for managing the deer herd though. If either deer herd is suffering or booming the state can issue less or more tags accordingly, instead of people just going out there and shooting any buck or doe they feel like.
The vast majority of deer tags in CO are valid for both species. Some WT only tags in eastern CO.I don't think that it true about Colorado. @Oak
AZ increases their revenue by doing the same thingThe Wildlife Task Force, with relatively little discussion and no insight from 'on the ground' wildlife managers, voted to recommend that mule and whitetail deer be managed with a completely different set of licenses. In other words, there would be no more "deer" license. There would be mule deer only tags and whitetail only tags. There are several reasons this would be detrimental to management and drawing odds.
First, every sportsperson could apply for both limited quota(LQ) mule deer and LQ whitetail. Obviously, this would make drawing a LQ or NR region mule deer tag that much harder to draw and tank the odds to draw LQ type 3 whitetail tags.
Second, if you don't draw an LQ tag, you could purchase a general
license(resident) for each species. With the ability to hunt both deer separately, it's obvious mule deer buck numbers statewide could take a pounding. Do mule deer in Wyoming need any more pressure? Many hunters now hold out for a good mule deer and hunt whitetail in November or kill a whitetail during the antlered season for their deer. It is obvious not much thought went into this idea, given the reasoning was to better manage each species, when just the opposite could happen. Imagine the Black Hills in November if every resident hunter could buy a general whitetail tag to hunt there after killing a mule deer somewhere else.
Third, if a hunter chooses to buy a general for just one species, they could not shoot the other species during "deer" season. It would suck if you saw a nice whitetail and only had a mule deer tag. It seems G&F upper management is looking for a way to get every deer hunter to buy two tags. Meanwhile G&F employees on the ground do not support this idea in general.
Fourth, no state I can find manages deer any different than Wyoming does now; a deer license governed by regulation for season and take.
This idea is now going through the process in the interim session of the Travel, Rec and Wildlife Committee. The draft is 23LSO-0009 and will be discussed on Aug 30th in the afternoon. There has been one meeting already and sportsman spoke out against the idea and made significant headway with the legislators to kill the idea. I am attaching the emails of the committee members that are meeting next week in Thermopolis. It is important for sportsman either to attend and comment, or make phone calls if you know a member or send emails to each legislator. One more showing of public opposition and the committee will most likely not sponsor the legislation. If they do sponsor, killing this bill in Cheyenne will be tougher.
Get involved, show up, call or write.
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