No, I wouldn't be disappointed with that outcome eitherAll unsuccessful for me. But I have my South Slope Diamond Mountain deer tag from the Expo, so I suppose I can’t be too disappointed !
I'm jealous of that lifetime tag. As a resident I now find myself waiting 2-3 years for an archery deer tag in the general unit I prefer to hunt, it would be about 4-5 years between rifle tags if I were to go for that. We used to draw general every year, but those days are long gone.That's me, I am so far into it that the odds should be tipping in my favor sooner than later.
I just hope that I can hunt from a motorized wheelchair when I finally draw my bison tag.
I have a lifetime hunting license for deer and small game so I'll be chasing deer with my muzzle loader east of Moab along the Colorado border.
When I bought my LL clear back in 1987 the Utah combination license for small game, fishing and a deer tag was around $34. I figured that it would take me 15 years to break even. Even in 1987 my LL number is below 300 and people could purchase them for a few years. But at that time $500 was over a weeks pay and people just didn't think that it was worth it when you could go down to the store and pick a combo license up every year.I'm jealous of that lifetime tag. As a resident I now find myself waiting 2-3 years for an archery deer tag in the general unit I prefer to hunt, it would be about 4-5 years between rifle tags if I were to go for that. We used to draw general every year, but those days are long gone.
The historical context is definitely important. At the time the lifetime licenses were phased out it would have taken me two summers of moving sprinklers to pay for that license. Fortunately you stayed close enough to be able to get good use out of your annual tags. I know some people moved away and never got their money's worth. That was a rough time financially for many, my family included. My dad also lost his job at that time and times were pretty lean for several years after that.When I bought my LL clear back in 1987 the Utah combination license for small game, fishing and a deer tag was around $34. I figured that it would take me 15 years to break even. Even in 1987 my LL number is below 300 and people could purchase them for a few years. But at that time $500 was over a weeks pay and people just didn't think that it was worth it when you could go down to the store and pick a combo license up every year.
I know of a lot of people that kicked themselves in the rear when it was announced in 1994 that they would no longer be sold for the same reason, a person could pick up a state wide combo license whenever they wanted to. But once the tags were dropped down to 93,000 people saw the worth in them.
Then for me a few months after I purchased mine I was told that I no longer had a job where I was working. I could of went up to the Wasatch front but that wasn't for me, so I moved to Colorado and the license came with me. So now for the last 35 years they send me a general season tag of the unit and hunt of my choice.
I've got 25 bison points and I refuse to do a cow hunt after this many years of putting in. It is a hunters choice hunt or nothing.Jim, I know it seemed like a lot at the time, but that license has paid for itself many times since then! I know you have no regrets. Can you pick any general unit with any weapon type, and you get it for free?
How many points do you have for Bison? I got into Utah after the wave of apps when they made it where NR could start applying for everything instead of 1 regular and 1 OIL species. I can't blame UT though; I could have cut my losses after I understood my future odds in about year 3. I'm just like everyone else and keep sending them money every spring because of that small chance this could be the year I get lucky. I want to hunt a giant UT bull elk before I leave this world.