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Started by deathfoot, March 07, 2023, 08:03:06 PM
Quote from: Red_Nekkerson on March 16, 2023, 10:57:52 AMI've spent years reading this forum, but never posting, but this topic I felt I had to chime in. I read the same article and some I agree with and some I don't. Someone mentioned about letting the biologists do their jobs. I agree, if they would do their jobs. And before those on the side of the biologists rise up to stone me to death, allow me to explain. When I first started hunting turkeys in the spring, we had a 4 week season, 2 bird limit, and we had to be out of the woods at 11am. Biologists told us, and I remember, because I was present at an event where he said it, that we had be out of the woods at 11 so hens can nest unimpeded. OK, fast forward about 7-8 years, the biologists told us that we could hunt until noon. then, they added a week to our season and added an additional bird to the bag limit. Then, low and behold, they decided that we can hunt all day the last 2 weeks of the season, and then this past year decided that we can hunt all day for the last 3 weeks of the season, nesting hens be damned. The same biologists that told us that we needed to be out of the woods before noon are now the same ones that say we can hunt all day for 60% of the season or are the same agency that the biologists work for at least. So, someone was either wrong then, or they're wrong now. I just don't have a lot of faith in the agency. Another phenomenon that I've noticed, is the same agency that said, 20 years prior, that we needed to be out of the woods by noon to allow hens to nest, exhibit a shocking willingness to set fire to the woods in April and May. I don't know why they don't do this in January or February, but I suspect it's because the agency might have to furnish coats to the people conducting this business. Since the "progression" or evolution of our seasons (spring and fall) have changed quite a bit in the last 30 years or so, and with all the advancements in study and research and data collection and access to information, to lay the decline in turkey populations at feet of mother nature, ie wet springs, to me is unpalatable. Dye could have saved himself some typing if he would have just said "if you want turkey populations to return, then buy an EV and turn in your gas stove ASAP".The coyote analogy, I'd agree with. People that blame coyotes for turkey decline are probably the same people that blame muskies for eating all the bass out of the river, but disregard the fact that guides float up and down the river almost daily with paying clients in tow. I don't know anyone that hunts coons anymore, and I don't know, but it seems like I see a heck of lot more skunks these days than I used to, and there are a heck of a lot more bears than there used to be. I can't see a bear catching many turkeys, but I'd imagine that they could make quick work of a clutch of eggs.I 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.The timber harvest business, I'm willing to admit, might hold some validity. A place that I hunt regularly, a tract of about 2000 acres, had a shade less than half of it timbered 3 years ago. I, naively, thought that cutting the timber would concentrate more turkeys on the area that was not cut. How wrong I was. Not only did the turkeys disappear from the area that was cut, they disappeared from the areas surrounding as well, not completely but pretty close. We (my friends, friends kids, my kid, myself) used to get about 8-12 gobblers a year off the place. Last year, there was not a single gobbler taken off the property by us. Matter of fact, I didn't even hear one last year, what time I spent there.
Quote from: mountainhunter1 on March 17, 2023, 09:15:14 AMRed_Nekkerson brought up a good thought - one that has puzzled me for a long time. Question is simply this: Why do so many states in the south do most of their burning in April and May while turkeys are sitting on the nest? I have wanted an answer to that for years.
Quote from: GobbleNut on March 17, 2023, 09:42:41 AMQuote from: mountainhunter1 on March 17, 2023, 09:15:14 AMRed_Nekkerson brought up a good thought - one that has puzzled me for a long time. Question is simply this: Why do so many states in the south do most of their burning in April and May while turkeys are sitting on the nest? I have wanted an answer to that for years.I'm not sure why some states burn when they do, but I do know that the general idea is to burn when the moisture content of the fuel is such that the vegetation will burn without the risk of wildfire,...and apparently in some places that window of time when those conditions occur is pretty narrow. Unfortunately, based on what has happened recently with controlled burns getting out of hand (example: New Mexico in 2022), I suspect there will be much more scrutiny about controlled burning.
Quote from: HillclimberWV on March 17, 2023, 08:50:28 AMRed_nekkerson the only pushback to your statements i will say is that i think you are blaming the wrong portion of the agency. I would be willing to bet that the decisions you listed are pushed more by the people concerned with generating revenue than the bioligists on the ground.
Quote from: Chordeiles on March 19, 2023, 04:36:09 AMQuote from: HillclimberWV on March 17, 2023, 08:50:28 AMRed_nekkerson the only pushback to your statements i will say is that i think you are blaming the wrong portion of the agency. I would be willing to bet that the decisions you listed are pushed more by the people concerned with generating revenue than the bioligists on the ground.Exactly. Gary Norman was against the all day hunting, and the year he retired, the commission started pushing for it. More $$. They wanted the whole season but settled for the last three weeks after the public comment session. I was against it and made sure to submit my comments.A lot of good discussion going on in this thread.Some things I would like to see happen in Va: separate the Turkey tag from the deer tags, manage Turkeys by region, do away with killing hens in the fall and stop letting people shoot bearded hens in the spring.I encourage everyone in Va to sign up for notifications of future public comment opportunities.https://dwr.virginia.gov/about/public-comment-opportunities/