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Started by turkeyfool, June 10, 2022, 09:30:17 AM
Quote from: Roost 1 on June 10, 2022, 01:12:24 PMQuote from: deerhunt1988 on June 10, 2022, 12:59:09 PMPretty crazy to me how willingly we are now days to give up our hunting opportunities. If you look at the data, I'm willing to bet an extremely small percentage of non-resident hunters actually kill multiple birds in a given state. Especially on public lands. And saving a few birds from non-residents is going to do NOTHING at the landscape level to help populations. On small, localized areas it may could help with carryover (that is if another person doesn't kill that bird). But in the big picture, nada. Before the social media/YouTube boom, (when turkey numbers still weren't doing so well in a lot of places) you'd never see a discussion like this get so much support. Once opportunity is taken away, you will likely never get it back. Regardless of how bird populations or hunter numbers are trending. Regs like this would also affect non-resident landowners and leaseholders. On the bright side, I guess it could potentially lower turkey lease prices (I'm all for that!) and free them up for residents. One thing I loved so much more about turkey hunting over deer hunting, was that it as an "everyman's game". No need for expensive leases, high price tags, or complicated draw systems. My oh my how quickly those days have ended! Just glad I got to experience the bountiful opportunities before social media, YouTube, and the commercialization of turkey hunting in general, all pissed in our Cheerios. You already need access to private land to hunt the season in its entirety in multiple states now (Alabama, Georgia) due to recent changes. South Carolina as well, but its been like that for a while. And we can brace for me. Turning into a rich man's game, fellas!If there wasn't so many turkey hunters in general, no social media, no YouTube, etc I'd agree with you 100%. BUT there is...... who would of ever dreamed 20yrs ago so many guys would start turkey hunting not to mention travel to multiple states in one year. People thought I was crazy 25yrs ago when I was hunting 2 or 3 states per year. I definitely miss the simpler times.
Quote from: deerhunt1988 on June 10, 2022, 12:59:09 PMPretty crazy to me how willingly we are now days to give up our hunting opportunities. If you look at the data, I'm willing to bet an extremely small percentage of non-resident hunters actually kill multiple birds in a given state. Especially on public lands. And saving a few birds from non-residents is going to do NOTHING at the landscape level to help populations. On small, localized areas it may could help with carryover (that is if another person doesn't kill that bird). But in the big picture, nada. Before the social media/YouTube boom, (when turkey numbers still weren't doing so well in a lot of places) you'd never see a discussion like this get so much support. Once opportunity is taken away, you will likely never get it back. Regardless of how bird populations or hunter numbers are trending. Regs like this would also affect non-resident landowners and leaseholders. On the bright side, I guess it could potentially lower turkey lease prices (I'm all for that!) and free them up for residents. One thing I loved so much more about turkey hunting over deer hunting, was that it as an "everyman's game". No need for expensive leases, high price tags, or complicated draw systems. My oh my how quickly those days have ended! Just glad I got to experience the bountiful opportunities before social media, YouTube, and the commercialization of turkey hunting in general, all pissed in our Cheerios. You already need access to private land to hunt the season in its entirety in multiple states now (Alabama, Georgia) due to recent changes. South Carolina as well, but its been like that for a while. And we can brace for me. Turning into a rich man's game, fellas!
Quote from: deerhunt1988 on June 10, 2022, 12:59:09 PMPretty crazy to me how willingly we are now days to give up our hunting opportunities. If you look at the data, I'm willing to bet an extremely small percentage of non-resident hunters actually kill multiple birds in a given state. Especially on public lands. And saving a few birds from non-residents is going to do NOTHING at the landscape level to help populations. On small, localized areas it may could help with carryover (that is if another person doesn't kill that bird). But in the big picture, nada.What it would also cause, is a chain reaction. We are currently seeing these chain reactions in regulations play out now. Many of us on this forum predicted this exact thing would happen. As one state implements non-resident/public land restrictions or reduces the bag limit, traveling turkey hunters focus elsewhere. Bama/Ga tighten down on public lands, more hunters head to TN. TN public lands get overwhelmed, they tighten down. We will see another shift in this pressure for 2023. The same thing will happen if states start going to 1 bird NR limits. Non-rez pressure will just inundate the next closest area with a multiple bird bag limit. When in reality, they won't kill multiple. It is more of a perception issue. Before the social media/YouTube boom, (when turkey numbers still weren't doing so well in a lot of places) you'd never see a discussion like this get so much support. Once opportunity is taken away, you will likely never get it back. Regardless of how bird populations or hunter numbers are trending. Regs like this would also affect non-resident landowners and leaseholders. On the bright side, I guess it could potentially lower turkey lease prices (I'm all for that!) and free them up for residents. One thing I loved so much more about turkey hunting over deer hunting, was that it as an "everyman's game". No need for expensive leases, high price tags, or complicated draw systems. My oh my how quickly those days have ended! Just glad I got to experience the bountiful opportunities before social media, YouTube, and the commercialization of turkey hunting in general, all pissed in our Cheerios. You already need access to private land to hunt the season in its entirety in multiple states now (Alabama, Georgia) due to recent changes. South Carolina as well, but its been like that for a while. And we can brace for me. Turning into a rich man's game, fellas!
Quote from: Cowboy on June 10, 2022, 02:28:58 PMLook out New Jersey, here THEY come!! Sent from my SM-G930V using Tapatalk
Quote from: joey46 on June 10, 2022, 04:44:12 PMI'm betting KY is seriously considering a non-res reduction but their tags are pricey anyway. Having lived there a few years I'll guarantee their residents would jump all over it.
Quote from: deerhunt1988 on June 10, 2022, 04:42:51 PMThe problem most have with non-residents is really a PUBLIC LAND PRESSURE problem moreso than a bag limit problem. If people have an issue with non-residents killing more than 1 bird, I imagine it is due to them (the resident) hunting the same public land. The non-resident is taking away from THEIR (the resident's) opportunity to kill the same bird. Or impacting the resident's hunt quality. Regulating non-residents on public lands is a bit different than regulating NR statewide!I really think Mississippi went the right direction with their 2 week non-resident public land draw. You want to hunt the public lands, you have to draw. If you don't draw, you can still come hunt afterwards. If a non-resident owns or leases land in MS, they can still hunt early season on private lands if they don't draw. What they legally kill on private lands really shouldn't concern anyone other than the same ones hunting that private land. I'm much quicker to support non-resident quotas on public land than I am statewide bag limit reductions. What I hate to see is RESIDENTS get shafted when entire WMAs go quota hunt only or enact stricter regulations when a bulk of the pressure issue is from non-residents. Case in point, TN's recent changes. More quota hunts and 1-bird the first 2 weeks for ALL hunters on some WMAs where half or more of the harvest this spring came from non-residents! TN should have taken care of its resident's first rather than restricting opportunity for all. Florida is another prime example of the above. More quota hunts enacted by the day, with no preference to residents. I've seen some hunts where over half the tags are drawn out by NR. I really feel for south zone residents who have lost a tremendous amount of open hunting opportunity due to some of their WMAs being pimped out all over YouTube since 2018.
Quote from: joey46 on June 10, 2022, 06:34:37 PMBe nice if KY, TN, WV and OH all opened the same day. Remember when OH opened on a Monday and KY opened on April 15th? The good old days. Really seemed to spread out the public land pressure.
Quote from: Jimspur on June 10, 2022, 08:06:14 PMQuote from: joey46 on June 10, 2022, 06:34:37 PMBe nice if KY, TN, WV and OH all opened the same day. Remember when OH opened on a Monday and KY opened on April 15th? The good old days. Really seemed to spread out the public land pressure.One of the ways we could spread the public land pressure out is to have3 opening days across the nation. The southern tier of states would open on April 1st, the central tier would open on April 15th, and the northern tier on April 30th.