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Curious from the Montana folks as to what is perceived to be the reason for crowds increasing over the last few years?
If we look at purely hunter numbers, they have been relatively flat for 10 years, thus my guess is that hunters are either hunting different areas because of decreased game in their historical hunting districts (e.g., as would be the case in HD's hardest hit by wolf predation) thereby increasing pressure in other districts , or loss of access to private which has led to increased pressure on public.
Same question for the Colorado folks, who have experienced a net decrease in hunter numbers over the last 10 years, yet the perception is that hunting pressure is going up.
AZ and UT, on the other hand, have experienced a staggering increase of hunters over the same period, thus I can only imagine that things there are even worse in terms of pressure.
Thought I'd share some data below which I had posted a while back on a different thread which I thought was interesting,. Make of it what you will.
View attachment 115131
Couple things you have to be careful of with this data is "number of license hunters". For instance in CO is that the number of unique CID numbers that had purchases? Were those numbers big game licensees, were they just points, if you bought a deer and an elk tag were you counted once or twice? From 2009 to 2018 did USFS or the state of Colorado change how they counted hunters, etc. This isn't something you can know... but it's a reason to be a little skeptical of the data. CO had 208,529 elk hunters in 2009 and 223,547 in 2018 so a sizable increase.
Also those numbers aren't really comparable state to state... ie CO had 223,547 elk hunters in 2018 and then 294,319 license hunters? Not to mention bear tags, deer tags, waterfowl, etc etc. Meanwhile Arizona had 305,214 license hunters and had 25,679 elk licenses.
So 76% of CO hunters have elk tags while 8% of Arizona hunters do...19% or Utah 28% So basically you are comparing a boom in Az dove hunters to CO elk hunters...
Further:
CO: 294,319 total licenses 223,547 elk and 88,185 deer tags
ID: 286,947 total license 81,142 elk tags and 147,647 deer tags.
So assuming no one holds a deer and an elk license (which most do)
Big game hunters make up 79.7% of Idaho's license sales while they make up 105% of Colorado license sales?
Point being, not apples to apples, so this isn't a useful dataset to compare one state to another when talking about crowding. You need to look at
"yet the perception is that hunting pressure is going up"
1. Shifting baseline syndrome/what pressue was like when you started hunting in 2014 in Co then 2018 might seem more crowded.
2. Distribution of hunters via technology, have things like onx moved more inexperienced hunters into peoples "honey holes"
3. Net license sales don't tell the specifics of individual units eg, Unit 53 in Colorado 509 hunters in 2009 in 2018 it had 841 ~160% increase. This is coupled with the fact that people are going to complain about a unit being too crowded, they are going to keep their mouths shut if pressure decreases, so you might only be hearing from a vocal minority.