According to the data i could get online your commonly hunted game like deer,elk and antelope are on a several year increase in numbers...
http://www.idfishnhunt.com/currentreport.html
Nonya you have to remember something , you cant always believe what written in a magazine or paper .
As trapper and Murphy have stated above in their posts . A major draw for the state is licenses , especially out of state licenses for the general season . Its imperative that people see this as a great destination for trophy game .
I would have to also say that it is IF you can afford to either have a guide or a way to access the back country or specific areas of private land then you will find that there are still opportunities for some very good hunts .
However this is not general across the state for residents .
Reading and believing such advertisements and I say that because that’s what they are .
Is really part of the problem . Folks read those things and then think WOW we are in real good shape . However if they take the time to go to either one of their regional 1/4erly management meetings or the main commission meetings at the end of the years and listen to what the management folks are say . Suddenly you get a complete different view .
The spring game counts for the unit I hunt which has no muzzleloader season so I hunt the general season . That spring count came in with a 8% B to D ratio for deer this year .
Now keep in mind that this unit is bucks only for general hunt . Doe’s if you draw a tag .
In our 4 day hint we covered near 6 miles , glassing and working the canyons . In that time we counted 243 doe’s and 2 bucks . Those bucks were forked horned bucks .
Of those numbers I would have to guess that more the 25% of those do’s were big barren doe’s with no young .
This isn’t just a one year thing . Folks have been reporting these same observations for some 10 years now , it’s a very real issue despite what you may read on the net.
Elk numbers very even more with some areas sustaining good numbers while other that traditionally supported strong herd numbers are seeing reductions in numbers so great that the units either have a permit only hunt or have gone to very short seasons.
This is why concerning elk the state went to a regional hunt and a tag system .
Used to be you could just purchase a tag and hunt any where in the state . Basically if you didn’t find elk in one area you went somewhere else .
Now you must chose a region to hunt in and chose as tag , Either A tag or B tag .
This system allows you to hunt cow and spike specific in during a given time OR you chose to hunt branch horned bull during a different time frame, you cant do both .
While the state does allow you to change you tag to a different region , its not an easy thing to do and you can only change it 1 time .
So basicly if you want to hunt another region then you have to go to your regional office , pay a fee and convert your tag . Its not a simple mater of going to a vendor and changing things over , so most simply don’t change .
What this does is pill large amounts of hunters into areas that seem to hold a greater chance of success . This results in an abnormal harvest for those areas which in turn results in the state reducing opportunity in those areas the following year
Add all this to predator numbers rising “as was also mentioned in a post above “
Wolf numbers here are exploding, mountain lions numbers also are also showing an increase and sightings are being reported even down in the larger cities like Boise.
Some areas are even showing an increase in bear populations . All this added to large hunter numbers creates a very difficult management issue .
That simply is not flattering and thus does not get printed in magazines
Also remember that when folks say that the state relies on hunter numbers to pay for the management of game in this state , that’s try .
However remember that when someone says ; im not buying a tag or hunting in a muzzleloader season if you don’t let my weapon in !. this doesn’t really effect things all that much . Especially concerning muzzleloader or muzzleloading areas .
1) because the muzzleloader or muzzleloading numbers are relatively small compared to the over all population
2) because those folks are still going to hunt so they still have to purchase a tag and license to hunt , despite not purchasing a muzzleloader stamp .
3) add that to the fact that a person doesn’t need a muzzleloader stamp anyway unless they are hunting in an area or season designated as a traditional muzzleloader or general muzzleloading hunt .
it’s a complicated issue that a very large book could be written on .
LMAO much large then this novel I seem to have made in this thread LOL