westksbowhunter
Well-known member
In my town of 300 very few use chemicals on the yard. I am sure in the larger cities, but I wasn't referring to them.I’ve read were the urban landscape has more chemicals applied than farm country per acre.
In my town of 300 very few use chemicals on the yard. I am sure in the larger cities, but I wasn't referring to them.I’ve read were the urban landscape has more chemicals applied than farm country per acre.
I wouldn't be surprised and these are the same folks that want all organic produce and no antibiotics used in the production of the meat they eat, if the even eat it, but they run to the doctor for a ZPack every time they get a sniffle.I’ve read were the urban landscape has more chemicals applied than farm country per acre.
With your fuzzy math you're assuming kdwp pays cash rental rate for WIHA acres because nobody is taking ground out of production for less than that. That's $40-70/ac in most of the pheasant range. Then they'd have to pay that rate annually to keep it in habitat. Their budget is a drop in the bucket compared to what's available through federal programs. The state does have money available to establish habitat but no financial incentive to keep it in habitat. The feds on the other hand have several programs which help with both establishment and pay an annual rate. Unfortunately poor administrative decisions in the federal govt have led to poor payment rates for these programs. People are getting offered less for CRP now than when they first enrolled it 15 years ago. There is a bottom line to be met for landowners and all of the programs in the world don't matter if it doesn't pay the bills.Back to a buffer program and crunching numbers, it takes up just over 9.5 ac out of a section to leave a 20 ft grass edge around entire thing. With that said the kdwp could go around 66 sections of ground adding 4 miles of 20 ft wide grass each section just by taking the money from 1 fully leased section of poor ground and leasing those same amount of acres in a buffer program. Seems like a lot of added habitat spread out over long ranges to me!
Clarified my post referring to dropping paying for a section of poor walk-in. Not getting a section out of production. And I agree it will have to be incentivised and that's why I think convincing farmers to give up a few feet of good producing ground on field edges rather than big pieces would be somewhere to start. Maybe kdwp and nrcs will have to combine some funds together to make it work.With your fuzzy math you're assuming kdwp pays cash rental rate for WIHA acres because nobody is taking ground out of production for less than that. That's $40-70/ac in most of the pheasant range. Then they'd have to pay that rate annually to keep it in habitat. Their budget is a drop in the bucket compared to what's available through federal programs. The state does have money available to establish habitat but no financial incentive to keep it in habitat. The feds on the other hand have several programs which help with both establishment and pay an annual rate. Unfortunately poor administrative decisions in the federal govt have led to poor payment rates for these programs. People are getting offered less for CRP now than when they first enrolled it 15 years ago. There is a bottom line to be met for landowners and all of the programs in the world don't matter if it doesn't pay the bills.
The Kansas Legislature isn't going to do squat. They can pay land owners a cheap price to lease their ground to sway NR hunters to this state by claiming we have lots of public land to hunt. All while not putting out any man power or expense to maintain land and manage land. They can't even afford to maintain the state parks. Boat ramps need to be addressed at many state parks but nothing gets done. This is all wishful thinking. They are going to continue with what they are doing. It brings in lots of money for them with little effort. There is no conservation in their philosophy. It all went out the window in 1995 when they opened NR deer hunting. One of the worst decisions ever for resident hunters.Clarified my post referring to dropping paying for a section of poor walk-in. Not getting a section out of production. And I agree it will have to be incentivised and that's why I think convincing farmers to give up a few feet of good producing ground on field edges rather than big pieces would be somewhere to start. Maybe kdwp and nrcs will have to combine some funds together to make it work.
How bad do you think it will have to get before they do something? Or do they never make improvements and they'll live off deer tags until that peters out too? Their license sales are taking hits last few years to a point I'd think someone has to be noticing. I notice you say you've been driving to another state to bird hunt and I've also hunted more days out of state last 2 yrs than I have in KS and I'd have to think we aren't alone.The Kansas Legislature isn't going to do squat. They can pay land owners a cheap price to lease their ground to sway NR hunters to this state by claiming we have lots of public land to hunt. All while not putting out any man power or expense to maintain land and manage land. They can't even afford to maintain the state parks. Boat ramps need to be addressed at many state parks but nothing gets done. This is all wishful thinking. They are going to continue with what they are doing. It brings in lots of money for them with little effort. There is no conservation in their philosophy. It all went out the window in 1995 when they opened NR deer hunting. One of the worst decisions ever for resident hunters.
How bad do you think it will have to get before they do something? Or do they never make improvements and they'll live off deer tags until that peters out too? Their license sales are taking hits last few years to a point I'd think someone has to be noticing. I notice you say you've been driving to another state to bird hunt and I've also hunted more days out of state last 2 yrs than I have in KS and I'd have to think we aren't alone.
They are interested in NR license sales.How bad do you think it will have to get before they do something? Or do they never make improvements and they'll live off deer tags until that peters out too? Their license sales are taking hits last few years to a point I'd think someone has to be noticing. I notice you say you've been driving to another state to bird hunt and I've also hunted more days out of state last 2 yrs than I have in KS and I'd have to think we aren't alone.
Well you're just a bit younger than me - but yes - like a frog in a pot of water set to boil - sneaking up on a lot of people.Now I did take a few years off due to my old dog passing, getting married, kid, house etc around 2012-2016 or so and when I got back into it again and bought dogs again it wasn't really until then that I remember going "what the hell is going on?" I started bird hunting in the early 1990s and started getting to shoot in the mid 90s and always remembered good hunting, I lived in Manhattan during college in the early 2000s and could leave class midday and drive 30 min outside of town and come home by dark with few roosters and handful of quail. It wasn't until the last 4-5 years that I've really noticed it I guess.
The NR licenses are growing 3:1. Residents are hanging it up because they know, see, and experience the truth. These are the people that live here and pay taxes year around. Their own biologist (Bidrowski) pointed this out this year. I’ve asked about getting a copy of this report and have seen nothing but smoke. Stuart Shrag, KDWP Public Lands Director, gave a presentation to the Commissioners that was fraught w/fuzzy math. Shrag claimed that NR numbers were not near “historical highs”. Shrags “historical highs” were numbers pulled from the 60s thru the 90s and were a one year anomaly he used to compare to last years usage of public grounds pulled from Isportsman. Covid anamoly was also thrown into his presentation. Isportsman only measures a fraction of ground available for public use so it’s numbers are skewed from the get go. Bidrowski’s report was a multi year study that showed the truth as it showed multi year trends, not one year anomalies. It was conveniently left out in Shrag’s presentation to the commissioners. In the interest of transparency, this was all relating to waterfowlers. One doesn’t have to be a rocket scientist to see this has also happened with upland.How bad do you think it will have to get before they do something? Or do they never make improvements and they'll live off deer tags until that peters out too? Their license sales are taking hits last few years to a point I'd think someone has to be noticing. I notice you say you've been driving to another state to bird hunt and I've also hunted more days out of state last 2 yrs than I have in KS and I'd have to think we aren't alone.
I hunted KS every year from '71 to '05. In 2006 I went to SD for the first time and haven't really hunted KS since, with the exception of a very few short and fruitless expeditions. There were years I hunted SD for 30-40 days total. Some of those years in SD were just beyond incredible for bird numbers.I notice you say you've been driving to another state to bird hunt and I've also hunted more days out of state last 2 yrs than I have in KS and I'd have to think we aren't alone.
Since nothing changed since we all talked about this last year, I think I'll just cut/paste the email I sent last year and send it to all of them again. I don't expect any change in 2022 either.Write your letters and make your calls. All of the commissioners contact info is on the KDWP website. It’s past time to acknowledge the writing on the wall.
It wont sadly. Our state government is worthless. I live in Topeka and cant stand any of them. One of the elected state officials doesnt live far away from me and owns a hunting preserve - he's been at the forefront of some bad bills for further pimping out wildlife. I didnt vote for him last election but alas he had an R in front of him so he won -- but barely.Since nothing changed since we all talked about this last year, I think I'll just cut/paste the email I sent last year and send it to all of them again. I don't expect any change in 2022 either.
And more importantly, they are interested in NR deer permit sales, $442 a pop. Why bother managing for pheasant success...They are interested in NR license sales.
There are Non Resident Landowner tags as well. Then the illegal tags that NR buy as a resident. What do you mean by charging NR's for a general license? In 2020 Kansas sold 38,857 resident hunting licenses while selling 55,596 non resident licenses. 28,935 residents bought a combo hunt and fish license and 4207 Non Residents bought a combo license.Then they should just charge for small game like SD does.
I would guess there are more NR upland hunters than NR deer hunters. KS 2021 NR deer stats are out. Applicatons 29,880 Quota 22, 026 and all sold out. So 22k deer hunters.
I could only find 2018 numbers for NR hunting licenses sold - 62,603. If you take away ~ 20k deer hunters buying a license, that means ~40K NR hunters came for other quarry.
If they charged NRs for a general license as SD does, they'd make a lot more money over all. They might even begin to see upland as an important source of revenue.
Wasn't that long ago that NR's made up a very small portion of hunting licenses sold. Kansas has catered to the NR and they are putting the squeeze on resident hunters. But even NR licenses sold is trending down. These states are killing conservation for revenue. The future of hunting is fading.Nonresident figures only:
20k deer hunters bring in ($442+97.5) $11.8M.
40k other hunters bring in ($97.50) $3.9M
Half the hunters bring the state almost exactly 3X the revenue of all the small game, bird, ducks, etc. Not that $4M is small potatoes, but the $12M makes the politicians and department heads salivate.
Admittedly, this is all oversimplification, and I'm biased by being a nonresident, that grew up as a native, but has a lifetime license so still considered a resident, and I've shot more deer in the last few years than I have pheasants, all the while I'd rather be bird hunting than deer hunting....