"These dang cow elk are destroying my livelihood, I can't financially survive if they keep eating my crops!"People are paying $1k plus to shoot cow elk, these ranchers are not letting us on for free. They want their cake and be able to eat it too.
This exactly.People are paying $1k plus to shoot cow elk, these ranchers are not letting us on for free. They want their cake and be able to eat it too.
I am not a fan of landowner tags, especially Western species that migrate and roam a lot. Not to mention that most of these landowners have a huge amount of public land locked up within their boundaries. They already have exclusive access and pay a nominal fee to graze it.This exactly.
The best solution is for the state to quit paying for crop damage altogether, but issue transferable ranch specific tags to the landowner. They can then sell the tags to the highest bidder, but must allow access to their ranch. I bet good bull tags would bring $5-$7k each. The outfitters would LOVE this as well, as they could contract with the larger ranches and offer guaranteed tags to their clients who are willing to pay $10k every year to hunt elk.
Similar to what NM already does.
What if they started a Sportsmans Stewardship program - a pertnership between the state game agency and landowners. To be in it, you have to take an in-depth sportsmanship and hunting regulations course, pass a background check and not have any game violations, and pledge an oath to abide by game laws, pick up trash as you see it, and treat the land with respect. When you are done, you have a certification as a Steward of Sportsmanship. It would cost the hunter a little money and time, but it would be way worth it if it opened up opportunities. You'd have to have this certification to hunt these private lands.Sure would be nice to see WGF work with those ranchers to create more opportunities for hunters to knock down some cow Elk. It's a win for everyone. Hunters get great meat for the freezer, ranchers have less crop damage.
The article does mention that ranchers might be more open to that if there was a greater presence of game wardens to monitor hunter behavior and keep them from doing stupid things like cutting fences, shooting towards houses, or taking a dump right near the sign in sheet. I added that last part from Matt Rinella mentioning that it has happened to ranchers in Montana that sign up for the programs allowing public access.
But unfortunately what will probably happen is outfitters will lock up those ranches and sell hunts for several thousand dollars.
Anything outfitters would love is bad for the future of hunting access and I'm against it.The outfitters would LOVE this as well, as they could contract with the larger ranches and offer guaranteed tags to their clients who are willing to pay $10k every year to hunt elk.
I like that idea. In addition to this, as mentioned above, it would be nice if the state stopped compensating ranchers altogether for crop damage. That way they'd then be more likely to let hunters who have passed that course go in and knock down some cows. Win for everyone.What if they started a Sportsmans Stewardship program - a pertnership between the state game agency and landowners. To be in it, you have to take an in-depth sportsmanship and hunting regulations course, pass a background check and not have any game violations, and pledge an oath to abide by game laws, pick up trash as you see it, and treat the land with respect. When you are done, you have a certification as a Steward of Sportsmanship. It would cost the hunter a little money and time, but it would be way worth it if it opened up opportunities. You'd have to have this certification to hunt these private lands.
And then the Landowners out there could feel a lot more comfortable about who is using the property.
Bonus: You probably also feel a lot better about the other hunters hunting the same area.
I like the idea too. Actually, I am all about doing whatever it takes to paint a better picture for hunters. If I were king we would all do some type of community service. Teaching hunter ed, bowhunter ed and 4-H archery was some of the best moments in my early adulthood. Imagine if practically every hunter had a resume that trumped any anti-hunter?I like that idea. In addition to this, as mentioned above, it would be nice if the state stopped compensating ranchers altogether for crop damage. That way they'd then be more likely to let hunters who have passed that course go in and knock down some cows. Win for everyone.
I'm not a fan, either... but the outfitters HAVE to be kept happy... They have so much pull in their states playing the sob story 'my livelihood depends on it'. So they push HARD to keep NR DIY hunters out of the western quarter of the state, deeming it a 'wilderness area that NR's are too stupid to wander into without getting lost'. In NM, they convinced the legislature to cut NR DIY tags down to around 2%. They were trying to do the same in Wyoming....Anything outfitters would love is bad for the future of hunting access and I'm against it.
I'm gonna make you REAL mad....Or...what about when these welfare entitled ranchers have cattle escape and over graze my public land? What do they have to pay?
Boom the solution, as if they really wanted one besides money.I'm gonna make you REAL mad....
the ranchers are getting PAID when elk on your public land are grazing your public land if they have the grazing lease!!!! And they are paying pennies on the dollar for grazing rights on public land.
It SHOULD be the opposite... keep the public lands ungrazed, that way the elk don't have to go onto the private for forage. And the ranchers graze the holy crap out of the public, making darn sure not to overgraze their private!
Exactly... but could you imagine the uproar from the ranchers!Boom the solution, as if they really wanted one besides money.
Pull all livestock off public land, build that habitat so wildlife don't need the wander onto private. And if they do..,,I'll gladly support paying a nominal damage fee.
Myself and many others have been good Stewards of Sportmanship. It's likely most have already taken a safety course. Why would we want to subject ourselves to more rules/laws for the bad acts of others. Gun control people have the same mentality. Sorry, I can't agree with your suggestion. Besides, if ranchers charge the amounts mentioned to hunt their land, let them hire someone to glass and photograph violations of stewardship; if it's as bad as they say.What if they started a Sportsmans Stewardship program - a pertnership between the state game agency and landowners. To be in it, you have to take an in-depth sportsmanship and hunting regulations course, pass a background check and not have any game violations, and pledge an oath to abide by game laws, pick up trash as you see it, and treat the land with respect. When you are done, you have a certification as a Steward of Sportsmanship. It would cost the hunter a little money and time, but it would be way worth it if it opened up opportunities. You'd have to have this certification to hunt these private lands.
And then the Landowners out there could feel a lot more comfortable about who is using the property.
Bonus: You probably also feel a lot better about the other hunters hunting the same area.
Yea well it is hard for me to feel bad for them. I welcome any positions that might counter my feelings on what they do but I see them as nothing more than pimps who prostitute our wildlife for profit. That directly conflicts with one of the tenants of our model of conservation here that states wildlife will not be killed for profit.I'm not a fan, either... but the outfitters HAVE to be kept happy... They have so much pull in their states playing the sob story 'my livelihood depends on it'. So they push HARD to keep NR DIY hunters out of the western quarter of the state, deeming it a 'wilderness area that NR's are too stupid to wander into without getting lost'. In NM, they convinced the legislature to cut NR DIY tags down to around 2%. They were trying to do the same in Wyoming....
That hasn't happened much in Colorado, since the landowners are issued vouchers for tags they can transfer to hunters (usually contracted with outfitters).
I'd much rather see WY remain 80/20 split with landowners getting transferrable vouchers (right now they can get vouchers, but can't sell) than WY go to a 90/10 split with outfitters getting 8% of the NR tags and DIY guys getting 2%.
I agree 100%. But that being said, state game agencies seem to always cater to them. If they aren't happy, it seems the DIY guys get screwed even harder to make the outfitters happy.Yea well it is hard for me to feel bad for them. I welcome any positions that might counter my feelings on what they do but I see them as nothing more than pimps who prostitute our wildlife for profit. That directly conflicts with one of the tenants of our model of conservation here that states wildlife will not be killed for profit.
Again I welcome any argument to the contrary but I've always had a negative view of outfitting. I don't see anything they do as positive for the future of quality hunting access. Matter of fact, I see them as extremely negative for it.