only use regular PayPal to provide purchase protection
Started by deathfoot, March 07, 2023, 08:03:06 PM
Quote from: huntineveryday on March 09, 2023, 09:42:36 PMI don't know how much fur is harvested in Virginia, but the collapse of the fur market has to be contributing to turkey decline in Nebraska some. But not from coyotes. Prices for raccoons dropped, then NAFA went bankrupt in 2019 and they really fell off. One of our state biologists commented on a forum that the last 2 years coon harvest has been around 50,000. When coons were worth $10 it was 150,00-200,000. Put a couple years in a row with 100,000 less coons getting killed by hunters and nest raiders are exceptionally higher in number. Those timelines, mixed with drought conditions the last 2 nesting seasons, seem to be pulling a 1-2 punch on nesting success and clutch survival for not only turkeys, but upland birds as well. But it's more than even those two factors.Weather patterns, fur market, crp contract rates, irrigation restrictions, crop prices, feed prices...those are all factors that can negatively affect our turkey nest success and clutch survival. When multiple sources contribute negatively for a couple seasons in a row, it seems like we get conditions we are currently seeing here.
Quote from: eggshell on March 11, 2023, 07:02:44 AMdzsmith, My very best turkey spot has a big coyote population too. I have sat and watched the coyote and turkey interations many days. The turkeys usually spot the coyote a long ways off and start putting and the coyote just moves on. When they do try to sneak in on them I have never seen them very close before the turkeys just fly up on a limb. I've watched this happen dozens of times
Quote from: RaspyD on March 13, 2023, 08:51:02 AMThere are many factors that have lead to the decline of turkey populations and it didn't happen overnight. It's easier now than ever to kill a turkey with the realistic decoys, blinds and dedicated turkey guns and ammo. Another factor that I feel contributes is the call-in check system or checking in on the app, which leads to inaccuracies in the total harvest from year to year...and some guys just don't know how to count . Had a fella tell me one time that he didn't feel like he had to stop at 3 birds.
Quote from: deathfoot on March 13, 2023, 11:00:15 PMQuote from: RaspyD on March 13, 2023, 08:51:02 AMThere are many factors that have lead to the decline of turkey populations and it didn't happen overnight. It's easier now than ever to kill a turkey with the realistic decoys, blinds and dedicated turkey guns and ammo. Another factor that I feel contributes is the call-in check system or checking in on the app, which leads to inaccuracies in the total harvest from year to year...and some guys just don't know how to count . Had a fella tell me one time that he didn't feel like he had to stop at 3 birds.No doubt. However, back in the day of check stations..plenty of people just drove on home and never checked anything. There will always be those folks. But each state needs some system and internet is what it is now. The bigger issue is the "earn a buck" system. People kill their buck, then simply check in a doe online (without killing it) just to earn their next buck. Not sure the solution there because we are too far gone to going back to just check stations. Unfortunately, there's a lot of ways around all of it. It requires honesty. But I still think some system is better than none. Surely the game department of each state is smart enough to figure in an X factor of birds that didn't get checked in and they can go from there. Again, I'm banking on people having common sense. So there's that. I just wish more people had ethics too.
Quote from: Red_Nekkerson on March 16, 2023, 10:57:52 AMI would, personally, like to see Va DWR take a more fluid approach to the seasons. If the trends start downward, back off a tag, back off a week, back off on all-day hunting. All-day hunting, I find is pretty close to cruel and unusual punishment anyway. The only benefit I see to it is that it gives the roost shooters twice the opportunity that they'd normally have.