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Started by Spurs, February 22, 2020, 09:33:27 PM
Quote from: Dtrkyman on February 23, 2020, 09:09:05 AMIllinois has outlawed shooting feral hogs as well, there are a few pockets of hogs in the state, no idea on that logic?Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Gentry on February 22, 2020, 11:32:32 PMAs far as dwindling populations go, which seems to be the norm in a lot of states. Do y'all think the increased hunting pressure on turkeys has hunt the numbers? Or do you even think there is an increase of turkey hunters?Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: dirtnap on February 23, 2020, 09:00:42 AMQuote from: James gang on February 22, 2020, 11:17:47 PM The poaching might not be so bad this year they are putting more law in the woods afraid someone might take a crack at a pigIn Missouri, it is illegal to shoot a feral pig? What is the logic behind that regulation?In SC, they have changed the limit from 5 to 3. Changed the season dates to a later opener in both zones. Made it illegal to kill more than 1 a day. You can now only kill 1 in the first 10 days of the season. And they started charging for turkey tags.I haven't heard anyone talking about how they liked the changes yet.
Quote from: James gang on February 22, 2020, 11:17:47 PM The poaching might not be so bad this year they are putting more law in the woods afraid someone might take a crack at a pig
Quote from: James gang on February 22, 2020, 11:11:16 PM Oh yeah its all about the elk we are going to have a season $10 a chance for a tag 50 tags total are they serious
Quote from: Turkeytider on February 23, 2020, 09:09:32 AMIt`s a tiny and relatively insignificant thing, but as individual hunters on our property we`ve limited ourselves to one bird per season. Only two of the four of us really hunt the 400 acres after the opening weekend. Personally, I`m going to try to be selective this year and will let birds I think are younger two year olds walk. I`ve not killed that many birds, but I`ve come to just enjoy the whole process and the woods more. Getting old!
Quote from: Flounder on February 23, 2020, 12:33:15 PMI know and seen first hand some birds last year were trapped in Brunswick County NC at the Ocean Isle airport and were reloacted in TX.
Quote from: Gamblinman on February 22, 2020, 10:39:05 PMHere in NE Texas, NWTF is releasing eastern birds to rebuild our population. They are doingg super stockings...80 birds per stocking. They have released several groups lately.
Quote from: Gooserbat on February 22, 2020, 09:40:00 PMThey ignore the real problems that they know they can't fix and try to fix the secondary issues.
Quote from: Rzrbac on February 22, 2020, 10:52:33 PMQuote from: Kylongspur88 on February 22, 2020, 10:45:17 PMIn KY they did an online survey we never heard the results of and if you ask anyone at FW about the decline in birds they'll either feed you some standard line about a bad hatch in that area or look at you like you have a third eye and haven't heard of this thing called a turkey before. If this were deer or elk they'd be in crisis mode. Birds and small game just don't matter much because they aren't revenue generators like the animals sporting antlers.Forgot about the elk, MDC seems very concerned about them. A little herd that nobody can hunt. If they do have a season I can only imagine how the tag distribution will go. If I want to see or hunt an elk I'll go to Idaho or Wyoming.
Quote from: Kylongspur88 on February 22, 2020, 10:45:17 PMIn KY they did an online survey we never heard the results of and if you ask anyone at FW about the decline in birds they'll either feed you some standard line about a bad hatch in that area or look at you like you have a third eye and haven't heard of this thing called a turkey before. If this were deer or elk they'd be in crisis mode. Birds and small game just don't matter much because they aren't revenue generators like the animals sporting antlers.
Quote from: deerhunt1988 on February 23, 2020, 11:11:55 AMQuote from: Gentry on February 22, 2020, 11:32:32 PMAs far as dwindling populations go, which seems to be the norm in a lot of states. Do y'all think the increased hunting pressure on turkeys has hunt the numbers? Or do you even think there is an increase of turkey hunters?Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkDefinitely an increase in 'traveling' turkey hunters and it will continue to increase due to social media. Another thing to keep in mind is how 'effective' turkey hunters are now days. You have folks taking 70 yards shots with TSS (killing and wounding turkey that otherwise would have lived), you have folks deer hunting them out of ground blinds with full strut decoys (which is much more effective at taking out those dominant, henned up early season toms that otherwise would have been dang near unkillable until later in the season - thus potentially disrupting the breeding cycle for a few days), you have 'the reapers' taking out field birds that would have been tough back in the day, you have mapping apps like OnX, and the list goes on. All this boils down to we are as efficient at killing turkey as ever before. And more folks are traveling out of state to kill them.A lot of experts theorize that removing the dominant tom early season can disrupt the breeding cycle for a few days. No research is conclusive yet, but a lot of biologist are looking into this issue. In some bird species females have a 'preferred male' they chose to breed with. I believe Kenny Morgan actually talks about it in one of his books. What happens if there is a 'preferred male' and he keeps getting his head rolled every few days on heavily hunted public land? This could especially be a problem in areas with early openers and in areas without a lot of turkey. The increase in traveling turkey hunters has DEFINITELY hurt hunt QUALITY on public lands. Kansas was the first poster child of this (not considering their recent turkey decline, just hunt quality back in the late 2000-late 2010 years). Seems Chadron, Nebraska has went the same way. Once folks jump on the bandwagon and flock to these places, I start heading to new places. Once again, this trend will continue to get worse thanks to social media. Some folks in this thread seem to think their state can control the management practices that happen on private industrial timberlands. NEWSFLASH: The timber companies are in it for the money. Not wildlife. And your state has hardly any means of fixing that. Turkey hunters are quick to place the blame elsewhere. They want to fill their limit in every state they travel to and expect mother nature to replenish all the birds, and maybe even add more!, without putting in any management effort themselves. Now this doesn't apply to all turkey hunters, but take a minute and think about how many you know that seriously get their hands dirty trying to help the turkey population where they hunt.I've also witnessed a lot of ignorance in this thread in regards to wildlife management. It'd be worthwhile for a few of you to study up more on that topic before you start spouting off blame and assumptions.