Dl1969
Active member
was able to take does on consecutive days but boy were they sure warmed up.1 on blm and 1 on a walk in piece,not a unit I wanna try again soon
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Pressure and lack of public accessLots of pressure?
Absolutely correct. I was just chatting about this with another forum member about a half hour ago. It's a very real phenomenon. Between OnX, GoHunt, and a buffet of YouTube videos, the public land hunting dynamic is changing very rapidly.I think the “OnX phenomenon” has saturated the playing field to the point where each hunting season there is a higher % of DIY, self-guided, mid-week and end-of-season strategizing, corner-hopping, go in deep, out-of-state people.
Seeing license plates from 49 of 50 states while you are driving around to the 15 accessible BLM chunks is a little disheartening.The world has been invited to hunt Wyoming pronghorn and all inside knowledge has been shared. How else could it turn out?
Hang in there. I'm sure you will the 50th if you look hard enough.Seeing license plates from 49 of 50 states while you are driving around to the 15 accessible BLM chunks is a little disheartening.
Agreed. I hunted a second choice unit this year that only a few years ago I could pick up left over tags in. The first year I hunted that unit was 2012 and there were a couple hundred tags left over. Now its 1-2 points for Type one. Until this year, I had never seen another person on foot. This year there were at least 11 others that I could see on foot and that was way back in.Absolutely correct. I was just chatting about this with another forum member about a half hour ago. It's a very real phenomenon. Between OnX, GoHunt, and a buffet of YouTube videos, the public land hunting dynamic is changing very rapidly.
A non-resident hunter complaining about an abundance of non-resident hunters, can't have your cake and eat it too....Seeing license plates from 49 of 50 states while you are driving around to the 15 accessible BLM chunks is a little disheartening.
I am part of the problem.A non-resident hunter complaining about an abundance of non-resident hunters, can't have your cake and eat it too....
I've had the same experience. Though anecdotal, it's very telling. I lived in Laramie from 2012-2015 and hunted the same unit each year (100% odds and close to school). It progressively got more crowded each year but I was still able to tag out on small bucks.Agreed. I hunted a second choice unit this year that only a few years ago I could pick up left over tags in. The first year I hunted that unit was 2012 and there were a couple hundred tags left over. Now its 1-2 points for Type one. Until this year, I had never seen another person on foot. This year there were at least 11 others that I could see on foot and that was way back in.
One clown from Wisconsin seemed to think
I am hunting 102 which shares a boundary with 22. This is my first year in 102 and for the life of me I can't find one!
We are now under a week from season closure, so 3 weeks in. I think I've been in there 1 time since gun opened where I was the only truck. Yesterday there where 2 others. I have not yet found an animal in there where in archery I was getting multiple stalks a day. I have been up to 2 miles from the truck.
It's been nuts.