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Don’t expect to hunt with me unless you have a Racken Rest.
For other drivers?I want it for I-25.
Yah I’m in that boat. I decided I can be friends (good friends, he’s a great dude) but I just can’t hunt with him anymore.When there's lead in the air, there's hope!
The tricky part about slob hunters is when your relatives are slobs. Fun to spend time with them but not when they're doing stupid sh*t.
Game wardens like video. We told the game warden about the given infraction when we got checked and he could have cared less. When we told him we had video of the driving through fields and shooting off the vehicle he looked like a kid in a candy store. They ended up getting ticketed.It has always been this way, at least the last 40 years that I have been hunting. Informal policing and going into a tizzy every time you notice an infraction is probably a waste of time and energy.
However, this website certainly has the knowledge, tips and ideas on how to get you to where and how you want to hunt.
Don’t expect to hunt with me unless you have a Racken Rest.
When you have 1 officer for 1 million acres (and yes, that’s a true statistic for one real-life area), the simple fact is most people aren’t going to be caught.
I've been hunting the Oregon coat range for 30+ years and have only seen 3 forest service and 2 odfw, and 4 of the 5 we're this year, within 5 square miles. One forest service was ages ago, when they used to drive the awful seafoam green trucks.This is the crux.
In over 30 years of hunting the District in which I grew up, I have never once run into a game warden. I’ve never seen one on the field.
Never mind poor hunter behavior, I think the country is full of coyotes, and I don’t mean the four-legged kind.
Poaching Rates: Any Guesses
Curious what folks here think the prevalence of poaching is in the areas you frequent? A half-hour of searching on my part didn't yield much in terms of data, but that's no surprise given how poaching typically occurs. I did find this article, from 2010 in Oregon: State biologists recently...www.hunttalk.com
I would go so far as to say that we need many more times (5X?) the enforcement on the landscape, whether that is fish and wildlife game wardens, or public land LEOs.
No trying to get you fired up again, but you’ve got me curious as to what happened.It’s 8:15. I’m back from my morning elk hunt. I gotta admit I kinda lost my cool this morning…my poor wife and son had to listen to my overly emotional rant decrying the slob-Hunter culture. Ha!
Three years back we moved here to what some would say is the hunting capital of CO. Today was the culmination of my three-year lesson on how lazy, entitled, and poorly thought-out the average hunter is in this part of the world.
People here always complain about out-of-staters ruining hunting (particularly those native to CA…of which I am one). Man, it ain’t just Californians.
Our hunting culture is broken. I’m trying to raise my son to be an ethical, hard-working, dedicated hunter. It seems that is a rare combination of qualities in the hunting community.
It really bums me out. It’s sad. The thing that continues to blow my mind is that the behavior is ruining mornings like this not only for people like me, but that behavior also almost guarantees they aren’t going to see anything during their own “hunt”.
This is the crux.
In over 30 years of hunting the District in which I grew up, I have never once run into a game warden. I’ve never seen one on the field.
Never mind poor hunter behavior, I think the country is full of coyotes, and I don’t mean the four-legged kind.
Poaching Rates: Any Guesses
Curious what folks here think the prevalence of poaching is in the areas you frequent? A half-hour of searching on my part didn't yield much in terms of data, but that's no surprise given how poaching typically occurs. I did find this article, from 2010 in Oregon: State biologists recently...www.hunttalk.com
I would go so far as to say that we need many more times (5X?) the enforcement on the landscape, whether that is fish and wildlife game wardens, or public land LEOs.
As a follow up, here's a link to an article about just a couple incidents local to me this season, that were reported. Although many go unreported, too. ODFW is offering some decent rewards for tips, given the increase in cases.I've been hunting the Oregon coat range for 30+ years and have only seen 3 forest service and 2 odfw, and 4 of the 5 we're this year, within 5 square miles. One forest service was ages ago, when they used to drive the awful seafoam green trucks.
Anyhow, poaching is absolutely on the rise, and here at the coast, it's escalated dramatically and disgustingly. I can't count the amount of poach piles I've seen in just the past 5 years. Backstrap and antlers missing, the rest dumped in a ditch... 2 in the past week alone, one buck, one elk. We desperately need more enforcement! As it is, in my area, we rely heavily on state police as our game wardens/conservation officers, because we have so few. And at that, our state police are stretched thin as it is.
Damn! Those were some absolutely beautiful animals, it's such a shame someone had to be so unsportsmanlike and take them unlawfully. Sounds awfully familiar, too. A guy from my home town years ago was charged with multiple counts of poaching, spotlighting, and all related charges due to habitually poaching the largest trophies he could find. For bragging rights. To one up the rest of the local hunting community. There was an article in the Oregonian years ago, when it happened.. sometime around '05-'07 or so, I think. Trying to find the link but it's likely lost in history. Just disgusting how people think this is acceptable in any capacity!Here's the Grant County incidents
YepFor other drivers?