I've lived and hunted through the thick and thin, or to say no deer and plenty deer. Seen my 1st deer in NW Ohio in 1961 and the sighting was wrote up in the newspaper.
Took my 1st Ohio deer in 1972 and less than 6,000 deer taken in Ohio the entire year.
Fast forward to the early year 2000's and 200,000 plus deer are taken each year.
Then today and only 180,000 or so are taken and cry goes up the sky is falling down.
I really don't think so!
Do I want to go back to the days of no deer or less than today's number of course not.
Over all what I'm saying deer hunting today is damn good in Ohio. Yes there or areas of few deer and areas of many deer. But everyone can't expect to walk out their back door and bump into a nice big buck. If you want that to happen then move to a area that has those big buck.
Been there and lived through it in my life time. The main problem is the younger you are haven't seen the truly lean years in deer hunting or sightings.
Like I said overall Ohio has good deer hunting for the masses.
I seen no harm in a minor $3 increase in hunting tags. If that little $3 stops someone from hunting they were ready to stop anyway. Poor excuse in my mind.
But NR tag increases should be in line with what the state the hunter lives in for NR tag amounts. If the hunter's state charges say $2-400 for a NR deer tag then that same amount should be charged to NR hunter hunting in Ohio. Fair is fair.
Simply because something was worse then doesn't make it okay today, especially when harvest numbers are 30% or more off peak.
Imagine if such reasoning was used for something like Silverback gorillas. There were only 3 left in the wild 40 years ago, and then we grew it to 20, but we killed half of them a couple years back, but its totally cool because 10 is way more than 3.
Granted thats a very over simplified example, but it attempts to show that just because there are more today does not mean killing half of them is insignificant or ok. Especially if it was done for no other reason than to shore up the profits of big insurance companies.
The DOW has saved insurance companies tens of millions of dollars in decreased payouts for deer vehicle accidents over the past three years. And they've done it to the detriment of the deer population, hunters, and their own revenue stream of tag and license sales. Why don't they go ask their insurance buddies to cover their self inflicted budget shortfalls?
I understand the DOW has budget problems, I understand the DOW needs more funding, perhaps they should have thought about that before they decimated the population and hurt their paying customers. They did! Tonk himself told us that he didn't believe they would reach their population goal because too many people would stop hunting. They knew this would cause funding problems long before they did it. Yet they did it anyway and now they're trying to sucker the very people they screwed over into paying more to make up for it.
I'm not surprised, I knew there would come a day when they wanted hunters to pay more for less. I said it on here years ago. It was inevitable that they would eventually try to raise prices to make up for the loss in the license and tag sales they themselves caused.
I refuse to support it on that principal alone. They made their bed and should feel the reprocussion of it regardless of the outcome. They knowingly did this to themselves and now they want to balance the books on the backs of the people they screwed.