HighWildFree
Well-known member
Came across this paper the other day and it resonated with me given all the discussion on here about outfitter tags, breaching dams, etc.
It's a bit jargony and maybe a little out of date, but the upshot is that hunters local knowledge and economic power is often ignored or derided, which in turn reduces our political/social power as a group.
I find figure 5 pretty interesting in that hunters tended to prioritize access and "non-intervention" whereas ranchers and outfitters prioritized exclusion and intervention. I think this dynamic is really playing out with the outfitter tag bill and the shoulder season.
Also on page 198:
"On the other hand, many environmental groups and recent migrants to the region have begun to espouse a ‘‘respect’’ for landowner knowledge, especially that of ranchers. Landowners are ‘‘close to the land’’ and have ‘‘generations of experience’’ in land management. As a result, the concession towards embracing or tolerating a view of private wilderness on the part of environmentalists has been coupled with a shift in claims about who knows more about the land. This shift has made apparently intractable problems appear more amenable to negotiation."
Nobody ever gives hunters any credit for their respect for the land or "generations of experience"
Having been at meetings where @BuzzH read folks the riot act, he might be an abrasive son of gun, but he has a ton of local knowledge, but he gets brushed off as a "barstool biologist". But some rancher gets up an rails against elk and they get deference because of their "generations of experience" and closeness "to the land."
It's a bit jargony and maybe a little out of date, but the upshot is that hunters local knowledge and economic power is often ignored or derided, which in turn reduces our political/social power as a group.
I find figure 5 pretty interesting in that hunters tended to prioritize access and "non-intervention" whereas ranchers and outfitters prioritized exclusion and intervention. I think this dynamic is really playing out with the outfitter tag bill and the shoulder season.
Also on page 198:
"On the other hand, many environmental groups and recent migrants to the region have begun to espouse a ‘‘respect’’ for landowner knowledge, especially that of ranchers. Landowners are ‘‘close to the land’’ and have ‘‘generations of experience’’ in land management. As a result, the concession towards embracing or tolerating a view of private wilderness on the part of environmentalists has been coupled with a shift in claims about who knows more about the land. This shift has made apparently intractable problems appear more amenable to negotiation."
Nobody ever gives hunters any credit for their respect for the land or "generations of experience"
Having been at meetings where @BuzzH read folks the riot act, he might be an abrasive son of gun, but he has a ton of local knowledge, but he gets brushed off as a "barstool biologist". But some rancher gets up an rails against elk and they get deference because of their "generations of experience" and closeness "to the land."