BuzzH
Well-known member
When deer numbers are this low, every deer counts and mortality is definitely additive. Whether that be winter, vehicles, cats, bears, hunters, etc. The problem is, if you never give them a break somehow, the populations will take decades to recover, if they ever do.
It only makes sense when there's dips in the deer populations to do what you can to help them recover.
Where I hunt whitetails in Montana, human hunting combined with lowering lion quotas by 90% really knocked the shit out of the whitetail population. No question a solid 60-70% reduction and there was essentially NO winter kill to blame. It was a 1-2 punch that, even after nearly 20 years, they have not recovered from. I'm guessing 65-70% of what populations were in the early 2000's.
Thankfully there has been reduced doe harvest, increase in lion harvest again, and also I think wolves have really thinned out the lions in the area I hunt. That was huge, and while a pack of wolves kill a few deer, a half dozen lions will kill wayyyyyyy more than a pack of 6 wolves.
IMO, if the goal is to grow mule deer herds, anything at this point we can do makes sense. That's not to say we should kill every lion, bear, coyote, etc. but I believe there's room to remove more of them and also to allow more opportunity for sportsmen at the same time.
I would also like to see trapping part of the legal means of take, regardless of quota's increasing or not. A few reasons for that, 1. I don't think hound hunters should have the market cornered. 2. It would allow lion harvest on smaller pieces of public that are surrounded by places hound hunters aren't allowed to run (private). 3. Not everyone wants to blast one out of a tree. 4. It would allow more participation in lion hunting/trapping.
It only makes sense when there's dips in the deer populations to do what you can to help them recover.
Where I hunt whitetails in Montana, human hunting combined with lowering lion quotas by 90% really knocked the shit out of the whitetail population. No question a solid 60-70% reduction and there was essentially NO winter kill to blame. It was a 1-2 punch that, even after nearly 20 years, they have not recovered from. I'm guessing 65-70% of what populations were in the early 2000's.
Thankfully there has been reduced doe harvest, increase in lion harvest again, and also I think wolves have really thinned out the lions in the area I hunt. That was huge, and while a pack of wolves kill a few deer, a half dozen lions will kill wayyyyyyy more than a pack of 6 wolves.
IMO, if the goal is to grow mule deer herds, anything at this point we can do makes sense. That's not to say we should kill every lion, bear, coyote, etc. but I believe there's room to remove more of them and also to allow more opportunity for sportsmen at the same time.
I would also like to see trapping part of the legal means of take, regardless of quota's increasing or not. A few reasons for that, 1. I don't think hound hunters should have the market cornered. 2. It would allow lion harvest on smaller pieces of public that are surrounded by places hound hunters aren't allowed to run (private). 3. Not everyone wants to blast one out of a tree. 4. It would allow more participation in lion hunting/trapping.