HSi-ESi
Well-known member
Buzz I see you used Montana as an example. What archery technology is Montana allowing that is causing all the problems you mentioned?
I'll play here - only because I am a MT Resident - and back in the archery game.
I have a corporate gig where I work 50-70 hour weeks. I have a young family - so my free time isn't spent on my hobbies (mainly, hunting). So I have limited time to hunt - where my primary focus is to bring home meat.
I have punched my elk tag every year since 1992 - except for 2009 (my daughter was born during that hunting season). Since 2001 my primary focus is rifle season - higher success rate with lower time spent in the field punching my tag. Right now, I'm hunting maybe 10 days per year. But I bring home the same amount of meat (1 elk plus 1-3 deer per year).
I was planning on getting back into bow-hunting in the next couple of years - the kids are getting to the point where family time can be hunting time (very excited about that by the way). I prefer traditional bow-hunting (I like instinctive shooting). But with the demands on my time - modern equipment with sights and a release - make it easy for me to enjoy both seasons.
So, if I had to give up these technological advantages to hunt in bow season - right now I'd have to give up bow hunting. I'm sure that there are others out there in my shoes. There would be less of us in the woods hunting. Less people putting in for tags would make it easier for guys to get tags.
Regardless of those things - even if luminoc's were legal in MT's bow-hunting season - I wouldn't be using them. And my argument there would only be on heuristic grounds - but I'll save that for another post.