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TWRAs stance on why kill #'s are down
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<blockquote data-quote="Starving" data-source="post: 4118275" data-attributes="member: 15765"><p>I believe there just aren't as many people hunting these days. Compare opening morning of muzzleloader to opening morning ten years ago. Ten years ago, there are a line of pick ups at the store at 4am getting biscuits and people hanging out at the check station etc... This year, I heard 4 shots opening morning, and none were really close. License prices have gone up, lease prices have gone up, the economy has not gone up. Many people are simply hanging it up. I hate to say it, but the sport we love is a dying sport. When I was a kid, practically every kid was involved in hunting. Now, very few kids are getting involved. I would be curious to see if hunter safety class participation is anywhere near what it was 10-15 years ago????</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Starving, post: 4118275, member: 15765"] I believe there just aren't as many people hunting these days. Compare opening morning of muzzleloader to opening morning ten years ago. Ten years ago, there are a line of pick ups at the store at 4am getting biscuits and people hanging out at the check station etc... This year, I heard 4 shots opening morning, and none were really close. License prices have gone up, lease prices have gone up, the economy has not gone up. Many people are simply hanging it up. I hate to say it, but the sport we love is a dying sport. When I was a kid, practically every kid was involved in hunting. Now, very few kids are getting involved. I would be curious to see if hunter safety class participation is anywhere near what it was 10-15 years ago???? [/QUOTE]
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TWRAs stance on why kill #'s are down
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