Trucks have been improved for the benefit of all… public safety, economy, stability, etc etc.A truck in the 80s was not the truck of today. Should we be happy and stop looking forward?
agreed there are many species in Ohio that are NOT being managed for.....I started bow hunting in 1976 killed my first deer with a bow in 78
In the 70’s to have a deer in bow range was an occasion
Has the deer population been higher than it is now absolutely
But I think we still have it pretty good here in Ohio
I do wish they would lower the bag limits not raise them
I think that for totally selfish reasons I like to watch deer
I am more concerned with the decline in the turkey population than the deer population
Not to mention pheasant, quail, grouse and rabbits
Just an old man’s thoughts
The way its set up the actual rule makers are fully insulated from repercussions short of legal action or pressure from other branches of the Ohio .gov
I think it’s also worth pointing out, that we have actual documentation of over 10 years worth of this “mismanagement” war drum beating, just on this forum alone. Are we worse off today, like those conversations 10 years ago predicted?
If the state was trying to ruin your deer hunting, don’t you think they would’ve done it by now?
We have plenty of shortcomings when it comes to wildlife and habitat management in Ohio, and in all of the Midwest, frankly. The deer program is probably the very least of those shortcomings.
I would argue that the decrease in hunters and permit sales is not because of a decreasing deer population. If it Is, and I’m wrong, by your logic we will see an increase in hunters in the years to come, as the population trends upward. I doubt that will happen. Hunters are losing access. Young hunters are more distracted than they’ve ever been in history. The entire social dynamic is changing. It won’t matter what was done in 2007, or 2017, or wherever. Eventually we’re going to lose so much access and so many hunters that we can’t stop population growth. Hopefully we don’t see that in any of our lifetimes.Yes. And No. But the No has nothing to do with the ODNRs intent and everything to do with their inability. It has gone just like Tonk predicted. When I asked him around 2011 at strouds how deep they intended to cut. He wouldn't give me a straight answer, so I asked him about how close they were to their reduction goal and he said 50%..
He then said that he doesn't think they'll ever achieve it because hunters will quit hunting. They'll get tired of not seeing deer, quit, and the population will rebound and there isn't much they'll be able to do because hunters are the tool to accomplish their goal. Great management strategy BTW, make people not want to hunt.
So anyway, we went from a season harvest total of about 261k deer killed in 2007 with no bonus gun and no rifles. To a low of about 160k killed 4-5 years ago. Deer permit sales fell from over 580k a year in 2007 to around 410k last year which has caused big issues with the DOW budget, and the primary reason they raised tag and license costs. But that's another topic. This year is the first year in over a decade where harvest has gone back over 200k. Days per successful harvest had dropped, and the success rate per hunter is rising. None of that is because of the ODNR. It's despite the ODNR. People stopped hunting just like Tonk predicted, and the deer population is rising as a result. Additionally, people seem to be more wise to the trick and realize they were lied too and shouldn't kill a bunch of does just because the ODNR will sell them a tag. So yes, if they could have done it, they would have done it. The rebound were seeing is despite them, not because of them and Tonk was right about that.
I would argue that the decrease in hunters and permit sales is not because of a decreasing deer population. If it Is, and I’m wrong, by your logic we will see an increase in hunters in the years to come, as the population trends upward. I doubt that will happen. Hunters are losing access. Young hunters are more distracted than they’ve ever been in history. The entire social dynamic is changing. It won’t matter what was done in 2007, or 2017, or wherever. Eventually we’re going to lose so much access and so many hunters that we can’t stop population growth. Hopefully we don’t see that in any of our lifetimes.
Yes I do blame the ODNR for that also. They should be the hunter's voice and ensure a quality experience.Do we blame the ODNR for the Turkey decline and grouse decline?
The problem is - most are not seeing this as an issue. I don’t think for a second it cause they look at the ODNR as the ultimate guidance as to what needs killed. They buy a tag and shoot the first doe they see.
Well Turkey and grouse numbers are declining across the animals range - so it’s now not just Ohio. Extremely tight correlation to habitat degradation.Yes I do blame the ODNR for that also. They should be the hunter's voice and ensure a quality experience.
I disagree, there are a lot of hunter's that will shoot as many as the state allows.
My brother uses venison as a majority of the protein he feeds his family each year. We hunt hard to give him as many deer as he feels he needs. The numbers at EVWA have been down tremendously from the early 2000s. We've had good success in the farm since the 2010s and in trying to improve the habitat to hold the deer numbers so we can continue. But overall we also know that if we want the numbers to rebound we take a year or two off from dropping 25+ a year.
You mean the 15 passenger van with a uhaul trailer filled with deer isn't the norm?Anyone that isn't for the reductions of tags and believes most hunters only kill one deer, are not anywhere around an Amish community.