- Apr 9, 2012
- 1
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Does anyone know which unit in Colorado they were hunting on in the last episode? For clarification it was the episode where Ike was hunting with the guy from savage arms.
The Hill ranch doesn't have an early rifle tag for the public. That hunt had to be bought ( written off as advertising or research or ? ) by the savage arms guy.One more thing, that was an early season rifle buck tag which takes 3+ years to draw or you pay an outfitter a ton of cash for a tag.
If that is the case then that is B.S. I wish the colorado DOW would quit pandering to the rich with tags only wealthy people can afford. The wildlife allegedly belongs to the public. Yet somehow more Govenors tags, land owner vouchers, and outfitter vouchers go to the highest bidder every year. The whole system is corrupt and polluted with political dishonesty!The Hill ranch doesn't have an early rifle tag for the public. That hunt had to be bought ( written off as advertising or research or ? ) by the savage arms guy.
I couldn't agree more. If they have that kind of money to burn and need to kill something that bad then they need to hunt a high fence opperation and leave the public animals for the public.If that is the case then that is B.S. I wish the colorado DOW would quit pandering to the rich with tags only wealthy people can afford. The wildlife allegedly belongs to the public. Yet somehow more Govenors tags, land owner vouchers, and outfitter vouchers go to the highest bidder every year. The whole system is corrupt and polluted with political dishonesty!
Im not sure if anyone knows how the ranching for wildlife works. Basically the land owner and the colo dow work in conjunction to improve wildlife habitat and if the landowner can prove that his land can support better than average carrying capacity then the colo dow gives the land owner more tags, agreed upon by both as long as the public gets to 10% of those tags ( issued through the draw).These tags are over and above the tags they would already get just base upon the size of the ranch, even if they weren't in the program.If that is the case then that is B.S. I wish the colorado DOW would quit pandering to the rich with tags only wealthy people can afford. The wildlife allegedly belongs to the public. Yet somehow more Govenors tags, land owner vouchers, and outfitter vouchers go to the highest bidder every year. The whole system is corrupt and polluted with political dishonesty!
I had like experience about 9 years ago with a deer tag and a rfw hunt. There are definitly good animals on a lot of these ranches but they do everything for you not to kill anything big. If you shoot a BIG bull then you just took 10K or more out of their pocket and thats not good for their BUSINESS!I have hunted on a Ranching for Wildlife tag on a ranch north of Craig. Myself and 2 buddies drew either sex elk tags with 10 pts. We thought we would have a great hunt. The only problem with these tags is that the ranch gives you access only ( and in our case, not all the ranch was available). The ranch we hunted on had been worked really hard by the outfitter and the elk were pretty much gone into the adjacent NF. We saw nothing the first 2 days, then the elk started filtering back because of the hunting pressure on the NF. I shot a 5x5 (the only elk I saw!)and one of my hunting buddies shot a cow. We hunted hard for the whole 9 days and never saw another elk. There were 7 other hunters and they drew blanks. The bottom line IMHO, is that these RFW ranches don't give a damn about the RFW hunters! The only reason that you are there is so they can get a few extra tags to sell to their outfitter. I'll never waste another pt on this type of hunt.