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Started by Dtrkyman, March 03, 2022, 09:46:03 AM
Quote from: Dtrkyman on March 07, 2022, 02:08:45 PMValid points, but where are the birds coming from, try and sell that to a bunch of hunters with good numbers in a particular area.So the state comes in and tells the guys, we have been managing our birds really well, but some clowns elsewhere have not, so we are going to trap birds here and give them to these poor fools.Illinois traded turkeys to Indy for river otters years ago, we have lots of otters these days and turkeys are generally declining.If you transplant the birds to an area with good habitat it definitely works, it is how the turkey got where it was, but moving turkeys from a good situation to a bad one is a short term solution.
Quote from: arkrem870 on March 07, 2022, 02:40:18 PMI hear Maine has plenty. Should trap and relocate them
Quote from: bwhana on March 07, 2022, 03:39:27 PMI have enough gray hair to see through political speak, and I'm wise enough to always question everything said and always follow the $ to get to the root of any situation.While I do think Dr. Chamberlain and the NWTF care about turkeys; the hard truth is that the population boom and now bust have occurred under their watch, and they have simply failed. He says now that they need more research and regional cooperation, but that should have been screamed from the mountain tops long before now. It is also hard to ignore the fact that his very livelyhood is based on research funding, so it is no surprise that he recommends more there as a first step.In the business world and most others, when someone cannot get the job done, they are gone, and someone else is brought in to fix it. I fully agree with more research and cooperation, as he states, but only with new folks at the helm that were not in charge during the decline.Unfortunately, our best hope lies in Fauchi and his cronies to manipulate the Wuhan flu to affect nest raiders, yotes, and bobcats, like they did for humans, and solve much of this in the next winter of death!
Quote from: nativeks on March 07, 2022, 08:09:43 PMQuote from: bwhana on March 07, 2022, 03:39:27 PMI have enough gray hair to see through political speak, and I'm wise enough to always question everything said and always follow the $ to get to the root of any situation.While I do think Dr. Chamberlain and the NWTF care about turkeys; the hard truth is that the population boom and now bust have occurred under their watch, and they have simply failed. He says now that they need more research and regional cooperation, but that should have been screamed from the mountain tops long before now. It is also hard to ignore the fact that his very livelyhood is based on research funding, so it is no surprise that he recommends more there as a first step.In the business world and most others, when someone cannot get the job done, they are gone, and someone else is brought in to fix it. I fully agree with more research and cooperation, as he states, but only with new folks at the helm that were not in charge during the decline.Unfortunately, our best hope lies in Fauchi and his cronies to manipulate the Wuhan flu to affect nest raiders, yotes, and bobcats, like they did for humans, and solve much of this in the next winter of death!I don't know how it is elsewhere, but our legislature makes the wildlife management decisions. They employ biologists, the biologist make plans and then the state doesn't follow them because they don't want to lose revenue. Probably why the biologist that made our plan quit and went elsewhere. At the meeting when the NWTF, former biologist, and numerous hunters asked them to follow the management plan I heard people say how much revenue do we stand to lose at least 3 times and they still won't follow it as written. I fully expected that biologist to quit at that meeting. He hasn't though.