Goosemaster
Well-known member
I saw a lot of out of state hunters in 2022. Way too many.
I have seen an increase in hunters in the last couple of years. People brag on the internet and telling everyone how to hunt MT. One guy does an internet show and goes through every step on camera of a MT bird hunt. This bill will do nothing. The only thing to do is lower bag limits 1 pheasant a day, 2 sharptails a day, 2 Huns a day. Protect the birds or in 5 years it wont matter they will be gone. Just look at every other sta
I agree. Right now I skip the first couple of weeks of pheasant season because of the crowds. I do know many professional trainers come for the early sharp tail and hun hunting and stay for the first few weeks of pheasant season. Give the residents some alone time will help with th crowding.If only roosters are legal, increased hunting pressure would not impact the pheasant population.
Hunter success is impacted by hunting pressure as huns and roosters learn to flush at 100 yards, sharptails learn to flush at 200 yards.
By mandating a 28-day non-resident license, would not substantially impact hunting pressure.
Delaying the season for non-residents by 2 weeks after the opener for residents would reduce hunting pressure.
Having a weekday-only 5 day non-resident license ($100 for each week) would reduce hunting pressure.,
with residents only hunting weekends.
I agree with that.2 per day, and raise the fees.Get rid of outfitters, and these pay hunting places!!I have seen an increase in hunters in the last couple of years. People brag on the internet and telling everyone how to hunt MT. One guy does an internet show and goes through every step on camera of a MT bird hunt. This bill will do nothing. The only thing to do is lower bag limits 1 pheasant a day, 2 sharptails a day, 2 Huns a day. Protect the birds or in 5 years it wont matter they will be gone. Just look at every other state.
I think they are going to kill him soonI have seen on TV that the governor (John Dutton), is trying to run the non-residents out of the state. That guy is a serious sob.
I think it might be time to end their saga. It will be interesting to see how they end it. They could have a forward spin-off with that one. I did enjoy the 1883 series, for singers, I thought Tim did great and Faith, with little experience acting other that music videos, to my knowledge, was fine too. The next one 1923 or whatever, with Harrison Ford....I just had a hard time with him in that role.I think they are going to kill him soon
It wouldn't bother me if it went to two.Im not greedy. This past season, there were out of state hunters in remote places.I have seen an increase in hunters in the last couple of years. People brag on the internet and telling everyone how to hunt MT. One guy does an internet show and goes through every step on camera of a MT bird hunt. This bill will do nothing. The only thing to do is lower bag limits 1 pheasant a day, 2 sharptails a day, 2 Huns a day. Protect the birds or in 5 years it wont matter they will be gone. Just look at every other state.
Strictly in terms of roosters, no, it doesn't. Harvesting roosters has no effect on the population. Hens are what keeps the population going year after year. Some even argue that roosters crowd out hens in the winter for the best available cover.If you increase the number of hunters you will increase the number of birds killed I think this matters.
Personally I am surprised it took this long. Many of us have run into nonresident hunters that have spent 6 weeks or more in the fall in eastern MT. I'm told that the professional trainers bring large dog trailers to take advantage of the early season and large amounts of land. The locals have a right to be upset. Now that I am retired I can spend more time hunting than just 2 weeks so it is only fair for me to pay more. I already do that in ND and SD. It will probably happen in the other pheasant states eventually. It is a limited resource and the residents should have priority.When I first read the article, the 50% increase in hunters over the past few years was noticeable. Then I see that the total number of non-residents is still less than 10,000.
A state and her citizens have to do what they feel is best when it comes to management of their wildlife.
Hey come to MN, there's no time limit on non-resident licenses.Personally I am surprised it took this long. Many of us have run into nonresident hunters that have spent 6 weeks or more in the fall in eastern MT. I'm told that the professional trainers bring large dog trailers to take advantage of the early season and large amounts of land. The locals have a right to be upset. Now that I am retired I can spend more time hunting than just 2 weeks so it is only fair for me to pay more. I already do that in ND and SD. It will probably happen in the other pheasant states eventually. It is a limited resource and the residents should have priority.