TheJason
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2024
- Messages
- 18,560
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I thought that might be the case. With 26 tags it's still possible that 1 NR tag could've been awarded randomly without violating the 20% NR cap or 20% random cap. The fact that it didn't shake out that way seems to confirm that a NR will only have a chance in the random portion of the hybrid draw if the 20% NR cap wasn't reached during the preference point portion...in other words, NR's have no chance in the deer/elk hybrid draw.Because the landowner allocation comes out before the NR allocation. 32 total tags, landowners get 6, NRs get 20% of what is left or 5.2 tags.
R | NR | |
PP | 17 | 4 |
Random | 4 | 1 |
Maybe if they were shuffling people in front of me for being the wrong gender or race…or for living in the wrong state…even though I’m a part owner of the shop.When you’re at the back of the line at the ice cream store you sneak behind the counter and unplug the freezer don’t you.
Also, the animals are held in trust for ALL state citizens, even though that don't hunt. "Giving up" 10% of tags by a state is not NR charity, it is a chance for non-hunting citizens to reap some economic benefit from animals they will never hunt via NR hunter spend in state.
Thanks for figuring this one out.there is no NR cap on antelope
Maybe if they were shuffling people in front of me for being the wrong gender or race…or for living in the wrong state…even though I’m a part owner of the shop.
You think people won’t stand up for their own interests at one point or another? I will. Am I supposed to have some intrinsic concerns for the wildlife? They’re unlikely to go extinct just because humans stopped hunting them on federal land. If you think you should be allowed to hunt them on land that we both own, then you should allow me to hunt them there also.
Look at the power that outfitters have in western states. Do you think outfitters get their power from resident hunters? Do you want non-outfitted NRs against you too?
Killing SB 143 was a win for nonresident hunters, it was not a win for the wildlife that reside on public.
Agreed. If nonresident and resident tags were cut which needs to happen to maintain the resource would you support that? Seems like people could care less about wildlife and more about drawing a tag.Respectfully disagree. The privatization of the resource creates fewer opportunities for all hunters, while handing management of them to interests with only their self.
Keeping the current model may not be perfect, but it puts all of us who care about wildlife into the discussion, rather than ceding it to those with political power.
I'm certainly open to that, just as I'm open to season structure changes, moving the dates away from the rut, etc.Agreed. If nonresident and resident tags were cut which needs to happen to maintain the resource would you support that? Seems like people could care less about wildlife and more about drawing a tag.
You clearly have no idea what my comments have been to the taskforce and department, largely in support of maintaining NR opportunity.Maybe if they were shuffling people in front of me for being the wrong gender or race…or for living in the wrong state…even though I’m a part owner of the shop.
You think people won’t stand up for their own interests at one point or another? I will. Am I supposed to have some intrinsic concerns for the wildlife? They’re unlikely to go extinct just because humans stopped hunting them on federal land. If you think you should be allowed to hunt them on land that we both own, then you should allow me to hunt them there also.
Look at the power that outfitters have in western states. Do you think outfitters get their power from resident hunters? Do you want non-outfitted NRs against you too?
While the statement I made asks the question “should I care about wildlife or not?” What I was getting at, was that banning hunting on federal land would not necessarily doom that wildlife. I often read and hear statements suggesting that our intrinsic concern for wildlife is somehow supposed to be a substantial reason for us to go out of our way to protect HUNTING OPPORTUNITY for others, even though those very people are actively excluding us/me/NRs from that very hunting opportunity. Guess what. The wildlife will probably not go extinct, and if a western resident thinks that the wildlife will not be fine without hunting opportunity, they should not be so quick to outlaw non-resident land owners from hunting there.Yes, you should have an intrinsic concern for wildlife. That's being a good steward of the world, a stand-up American and a decent human being, and it helps ensure that there's clean air, water and open space to help keep soil in place and stop erosion far downstream, as well as help filter pollution in wetlands, etc. It means farm and ranchland that stays in production, and it means we have the capacity to escape the maddening crowds to find some solace and comfort in quiet and untrammeled lands. There is value in the Shenandoah wilderness, even though I likely won't ever be there. There's value in a marine national monument that eliminates commercial fishing, even it means I can't buy cheap Mahi.
But it's a fair point that if we alienate the DIY NR hunter, then we lose a powerful voice in state-based wildlife management. That's why nobody is talking about eliminating NR's entirely - it's a discussion about the best way to move forward w/o allowing people to jump in line & buy their place, just as it's a discussion about the fact that people who hunt out of state are doing this for recreation versus those who live in state, even if they only participate for recreation (looking at myself here as well).
Folks should remember that it was a massive outpouring of DIY Non-residents who helped stop MT's rush to privatize last session in both SB 143 & HB505. @ImBillT is 100% correct that our discussions can't alienate those folks, while we seek to find balance between resident & NR crowds - which I still maintain that eliminating PP's & going to a straight draw for everyone can get us.
While the statement I made asks the question “should I care about wildlife or not?” What I was getting at, was that banning hunting on federal land would not necessarily doom that wildlife. I often read and hear statements suggesting that our intrinsic concern for wildlife is somehow supposed to be a substantial reason for us to go out of our way to protect HUNTING OPPORTUNITY for others, even though those very people are actively excluding us/me/NRs from that very hunting opportunity. Guess what. The wildlife will probably not go extinct, and if a western resident thinks that the wildlife will not be fine without hunting opportunity, they should not be so quick to outlaw non-resident land owners from hunting there.
Just a clarification. Not a beef with your general thoughts.
Again, OTC only works in unique situations where success is really low. Unlimited sheep units, Colorado elk where elk can hide on private, archery only antelope units where success is low, etc... OTC does not work in 99% of situations.The numbers I quoted were just draw tags. There are even more given out via OTC. We could cycle through EVERYONE in a year with OTC (unlimited). And sure the success rates are low, but I’d like to see a @wllm graph showing your likelihood to shoot an elk when hunting low success units every year vs hunting a premium unit with 80% success once every 40 years. I bet you’re more likely to kill an elk hunting the low success units. That’s not even taking into account the fact that elk hunting once every 40 years puts you at a disadvantage because you’re not exactly an “experienced” elk hunter at that point.
Just imagine if the states handled tags like Huntin Fool or the other services.Every single LE tag from every state goes into a hat, anyone who wants to draw buys a $100 raffle ticket. They start at moose/sheep and work their way down to the tags nobody wants. If you draw a tag and don’t want it you go back into the raffle.
Get what you get and don’t throw a fit.
Never...so may as well give up on it.We have both said this several times, but when will it get traction?
I love the Idaho system as well and wish more states would make you pick one of the big 3 tags and make them all OIL tags. I am a little partial to Idaho since I drew a moose tag this year but my odds of drawing the unit I applied for as a non-resident were considerably higher than almost every unit in Montana as a resident with 13 points.Idaho
No point system.
Restricted to one draw hunt per year.
I like it.