I'm just not lucky enough to draw one of my favorite areas that is among those listed. We don't have points as residents and have to rely on luck. Something that I have little of. I keep trying though. Good luck to you Cowboy.One of Guy's units is my favorite unit for deer. I have max points and still cannot draw it. Hunted it back in the 80's & 90"s and did well. I'll keep trying............
Yeah, this will have a long term impact. Could be rough over there for quite a while.99 out of a 100 fawns collared in G and H died over winter? Wow. Harsh.. That's going to have an impact over the next few years.
That figure is pretty alarming, I do not see the G&F commission shutting the entire season down though....it cuts into revenue.99 died out of 100...yikes
At what point are they going to shut the season down to try and let the herds bounce back I wonder?
99 died out of 100...yikes
At what point are they going to shut the season down to try and let the herds bounce back I wonder?
Doubt they shut down the season, I'd think they would eventually have to cap the unlimited licenses for residents though.99 died out of 100...yikes
At what point are they going to shut the season down to try and let the herds bounce back I wonder?
I disagree. Deer will tend a single doe the whole time she is in estrous. Mule deer might not be quite as bad as whitetail to lock down completely away from other deer, but the tendency is still there. Sure all the does will be bred but will it be during their 1st, 2nd,or 3rd cycle? The later bred does will give birth to fawns late that won't be able to handle even an average winter, must less a severe one. Fawn mortality from predation will be higher without a "saturation" of fawns being born at the same time.Harvesting bucks really won't hurt or help the situation. The remaining does will get bred regardless. The real negative impact to hunters will be the loss of that complete generation of bucks 2-5 years from now and the overall loss of production from the doe fawns that could have produced more bucks over the next 4-10 years.