Elky Welky
Well-known member
Last week, while thousands of hunters, @Big Fin, and @Ben Long gathered in Minneapolis for Rendezvous, I saw Hunt Quietly attack BHA over R3. They went through the last 4 Backcountry Journals and concluded that half the work BHA does is R3. How they decided that, I'm not too clear. I think they are qualifying any instance where 2 or more hunters gather as R3, whether it is for a stewardship project, a pint night, or whatever else. My question though, is why is it their job to police another conservation org, and that one specifically? Don't they have something better to do?
Which brings me to my bigger point. I'm exhausted trying to defend BHA and the work of grassroots volunteers on here and elsewhere. There are exactly two groups that I see show up for conservation in MT on a consistent basis, advocating in the legislature and at the commission meetings, and those are BHA and MWF (the Montana-based arm of the National Wildlife Federation). The work these orgs, and others, are doing is what makes the biggest difference in MT's policies.
BHA is not the problem. We advocate for public land, water, and wildlife. That doesn't make BHA inherently anti-private land, and the green decoys nonsense was long debunked as a smear campaign run by the extraction lobby, not rooted in any kind of fact. Many hunt talkers on here have a problem with MT-BHA raising money for mule deer conservation, and these are the exact same people complaining about mule deer management in MT. Potentially tens of thousands of dollars raised for mule deer management will go far further than complaining on a forum website.
I've raised this metaphor before and I will raise it again: please, stop throwing water on the firefighters and not the fire. No conservation group is going to do 100% of what you want them to do. I, personally, have found myself incredibly frustrated with a few of the more species-specific orgs for not showing up when I think they should. But I still am a member and support them. I don't publicly badmouth them, because I also believe in the other great work they are doing and I understand that we are on the same team. If you can find an org that does 80% of what you like, they are probably worth joining. And you can make far more of a difference in numbers regarding real policy, and even changing those orgs for the better if you want them to do more.
That's really all I've got left to say on the topic. I think the work we do probably stands alone. And with more work responsibilities on my plate in my day job, I simply don't have time to keep defending BHA on here and elsewhere. And the point being; I shouldn't have to. I prefer to spend my volunteer time on the policies and doing the good work, not defending it.
Which brings me to my bigger point. I'm exhausted trying to defend BHA and the work of grassroots volunteers on here and elsewhere. There are exactly two groups that I see show up for conservation in MT on a consistent basis, advocating in the legislature and at the commission meetings, and those are BHA and MWF (the Montana-based arm of the National Wildlife Federation). The work these orgs, and others, are doing is what makes the biggest difference in MT's policies.
BHA is not the problem. We advocate for public land, water, and wildlife. That doesn't make BHA inherently anti-private land, and the green decoys nonsense was long debunked as a smear campaign run by the extraction lobby, not rooted in any kind of fact. Many hunt talkers on here have a problem with MT-BHA raising money for mule deer conservation, and these are the exact same people complaining about mule deer management in MT. Potentially tens of thousands of dollars raised for mule deer management will go far further than complaining on a forum website.
I've raised this metaphor before and I will raise it again: please, stop throwing water on the firefighters and not the fire. No conservation group is going to do 100% of what you want them to do. I, personally, have found myself incredibly frustrated with a few of the more species-specific orgs for not showing up when I think they should. But I still am a member and support them. I don't publicly badmouth them, because I also believe in the other great work they are doing and I understand that we are on the same team. If you can find an org that does 80% of what you like, they are probably worth joining. And you can make far more of a difference in numbers regarding real policy, and even changing those orgs for the better if you want them to do more.
That's really all I've got left to say on the topic. I think the work we do probably stands alone. And with more work responsibilities on my plate in my day job, I simply don't have time to keep defending BHA on here and elsewhere. And the point being; I shouldn't have to. I prefer to spend my volunteer time on the policies and doing the good work, not defending it.