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Started by mountainhunter1, May 02, 2023, 05:06:43 PM
Quote from: guesswho on May 02, 2023, 05:14:33 PMEver how many an individual hunter has the time, money, family support and the law will allow. If that's two, then two, if that's 20 or more, so be it.
Quote from: joey46 on May 02, 2023, 05:25:19 PMThat is a loaded question and I'm not falling into that trap. Any hunter that has the resources to hunt multiple states, follows the game laws, and utilizes the bird is more than welcome IMO to go for it. Under that criteria one in a thousand will qualify. OOS hunters can tell you the $$$$ involved to hunt other states. Border state hunters could be an exception but the price of OOS licenses are pretty much out of sight. No longer a sport for the cheap a$$.
Quote from: guesswho on May 02, 2023, 06:33:50 PMOk, I change my answer to one. And the hunter should hang his head in shame for killing it, even if the state he is hunting in thinks the population is healthy enough that he should be able to kill two without decimating the population.
Quote from: joey46 on May 02, 2023, 06:17:12 PM Why in heavens name would me, or anyone, shooting a FL bird in March then a PA bird in May make any difference in the overall scheme of things?
Quote from: joey46 on May 02, 2023, 06:39:17 PMGlad you changed your answer. We would have thought you were a greedy game hog. Lol.
Quote from: mountainhunter1 on May 02, 2023, 06:08:11 PMQuote from: joey46 on May 02, 2023, 05:25:19 PMThat is a loaded question and I'm not falling into that trap. Any hunter that has the resources to hunt multiple states, follows the game laws, and utilizes the bird is more than welcome IMO to go for it. Under that criteria one in a thousand will qualify. OOS hunters can tell you the $$$$ involved to hunt other states. Border state hunters could be an exception but the price of OOS licenses are pretty much out of sight. No longer a sport for the cheap a$$.Let me clarify, my question had nothing to do with whether a person has the means financially, or the time and ability and family support to hunt all over the nation each year. I too would say just based on those unrelated factors to go for it as far hunting new places if one is able to do so. My question was posed on the angle of what can the turkey population sustain? I will expose my ulterior motive in asking this question and it is not aimed at the non resident hunter or yourself, so please don't think otherwise. But - with all the data showing that the bottom is dropping out of the turkey population all across the country without hardly any exceptions, and then you see those saying that he/she is all for killing 20 or more birds if they have the means to do it - it is pretty easy to know that that individual does not have the turkey's best interest in mind. A man insisting on killing 15-20 or more turkeys each spring with the turkey numbers down as bad as they are right now is kind of like a husband and wife sitting at the table and realizing that they only have 500 dollars left to spend for the month on un paid bills for them and the kids, and then the husband looks across the table and tells his wife that he is going to go and buy a Benelli M2 the next day and that she and the rest of the family can sit on a tack if they do not like it. Pretty clear that the husband does not have his family's best interests in mind at that point.