|
|
Scopes
by Hoof2table. 11/15/24 07:27 AM
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
|
147 registered members (RockFarmer, Hunting-231, burbank, ronfromramer, BAR1225, Forrestgump1, top cat, BobK, turkey_killer, Sqzpla, SilentButDeadly, Bruno, Butchman205, WDE, Cactus_buck, Scdoghunter667, gwstang, slanddeerhunter, aucountry, lefthorn, Auburn1716, seapro19, knock him down, AU coonhunter, gobbler, biglmbass, Ray_Coon, Chancetribe, BCLC, auman, curt99rsv, Big Buck Video, Reload410, Floorman1, CatfishJunkie, bug54, CNC, Morris, robinhedd, deerkiller25, TexasHuntress, Paint Rock 00, Shotts2000, Mennen34, square, Holcomb, Ruger7mag, cartervj, sj22, dave260rem!, UARandy3, having fun now, G/H, 865, woodduck, !shiloh!, rutwad, DEADorALIVE, BrandonClark, jwalker77, fillmore, WC82, jtillery, rickyh_2, Rainbowstew, CeeHawk37, Beadlescomb, fishunt1001, kyles, AJones, mjs14, geeb1, Skullworks, GoldenEagle, ALMODUX, Justice, fr8-shkr, deadeye48, dquick1, TGreen, Whiskey9, Young20, lectrode, ridgestalker, UA Hunter, rst87, dirtwrk, 007, jdstephen44, Cedar, janiemae, scrape, Whitetaillane, DRHT308, brianr, outdoorguy88, Thread Killer, hayman, BigUncleLeroy, bamafarmer, Haybale, BuckRidge17, BamaStrapAssassi, tucker07, 4Him146, BAR II .270, desertdog, 380jeff, BradB, DoubleB, eclipse829, Bmyers142, BOFF, Madmax0818, jhardy, rrice0725, General, Gobble4me757, therealhojo, CRUTCHJD76, BPI, Bamajoz, Oscarflytyer, metalmuncher, jaredhunts, OutdoorsAL, RSF, Tailwalk7, BearBranch, PaytonWP, Parker243, akbejeepin, 000buck, 2 ducks, WARPhEAGLE, turfarmer, 11 invisible),
1,174
guests, and 0
spiders. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: gobbler]
#1662744
02/24/16 03:29 AM
02/24/16 03:29 AM
|
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 3,834 Camden, AL
SwampHunter
10 point
|
10 point
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 3,834
Camden, AL
|
I think the DNR knows the CAB is not going to go that far, but they proposed that and will be glad for moving opening day to the 20th and going with a 4 bird limit. It won't amount to a hill of beans in the end.
The "limit" is merely a recommendation as it can't be enforced. Reducing the days afield is the only thing that reduces the harvest, IF the harvest needs to be reduced. However, when daylight savings time started so much earlier, that, in effect, reduced the harvest for many as we can't go before work like we used to. Simply not enough time.
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: gobbler]
#1662769
02/24/16 03:43 AM
02/24/16 03:43 AM
|
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,911 huntin the big lease
Turkeymaster
8 point
|
8 point
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 1,911
huntin the big lease
|
I have no shortage of birds on any property I have access too, there is simply no decline in the numbers. I still see flocks of 50 plus in the winter and fall, I still hear double digit gobblers in the mornings, I still have plenty left after a 5 bird limit and a march 15th start date. Change the law if you must but that's when I'll become an outlaw. Shortening the season will only take money out of my pocket and some of my families. we should exterminate the coons and opossums more so than the yotes. yotes are tougher on the fawns than the turkeys IMO. you want successful hatches, kill the egg eaters and the hens will do the rest. I kill every opossum, rat snake, coon, or whatever I can in order to help them out. only egg eater I wont kill is a king snake. IMO the law makers are SMFERS if they change the season and bag limit
"All is fair in love, War and Turkey Hunting"
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: SwampHunter]
#1662778
02/24/16 03:50 AM
02/24/16 03:50 AM
|
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 12,341 Sylacauga, AL
poorcountrypreacher
Booner
|
Booner
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 12,341
Sylacauga, AL
|
Oct1981, that was a great post.
>>>i believe the science is spot on. Most of you who are so passionate about turkeys also believe this. Its starts at the nest. Birds must have ample nesting habitat not only for the protectiom of the nest but also for a safe brood rearing habitat. It must provide great cover and food to raise a new poult for the first few weeks of life at least until the point at which that bird is able to fly to escape ground predation.
However, most hunters do not have the ability, whether it be the resource (land, equipment, time, cash, etc.) or the knowledge to properly manage for nesting habitat. <<<
You are certainly correct, but some landowners that are also hunters have that ability. The generous season and limit has encouraged those people to spend the money, forgo the income, and do the work to provide that habitat. When turkey and deer were being reestablished in AL, the dcnr talked about their partnership with landowners and the fact they wanted liberal seasons to encourage people to manage for wildlife. It was a unique philosophy that few other states followed, and it resulted in AL having the best turkey hunting in the nation. The current dcnr seldom even mentions that partnership that brought back deer and turkey. Reading their publications, one could get the idea that a certain national turkey organization is responsible for what we have. That ain't the way it happened.
The decline of quail is a good example of the need for landowner management to produce wildlife. Its extremely expensive to manage land for quail and it takes a lot of land to do it. As I'm sure you know, they are much different from turkeys. They can't survive in isolation. I don't know what the minimum amount of land needed to produce quail might be, but I can say 400 acres is not enough. I got my place up to having 2 coveys, but they faded away and now I don't think I have a bird.
But the same efforts to produce quail did indeed work for turkeys. They nest in the cover I provided, and then spread out to the paper company land around me. Everyone in the area benefits, and I'm happy that my neighbors have turkeys to hunt too.
Will the thousands of landowners like me that are passionate enough about turkeys to manage their land for them continue to do it now? Those are the places where turkeys are produced. Has anyone at the dcnr even thought about this? I haven't heard it mentioned.
All the labor of man is for his mouth, and yet the appetite is not filled.
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: NightHunter]
#1662787
02/24/16 03:58 AM
02/24/16 03:58 AM
|
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 36,512 Boxes Cove
2Dogs
Freak of Nature
|
Freak of Nature
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 36,512
Boxes Cove
|
Someone sent me this. If accurate, 70% of hunters do NOT perceive a decline I don't believe that was broken out by District but I'd venture to say I know who is perceiving the decline because I've met with a few of them. Why would it matter if the survey were broken down in districts, "they" want only one district that encompasses the whole state.
"Why do you ask"?
Always vote the slowest path to socialism.
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: poorcountrypreacher]
#1662793
02/24/16 04:02 AM
02/24/16 04:02 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 338 Jackson Co
Mason85
4 point
|
4 point
Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 338
Jackson Co
|
Oct1981, that was a great post.
>>>i believe the science is spot on. Most of you who are so passionate about turkeys also believe this. Its starts at the nest. Birds must have ample nesting habitat not only for the protectiom of the nest but also for a safe brood rearing habitat. It must provide great cover and food to raise a new poult for the first few weeks of life at least until the point at which that bird is able to fly to escape ground predation.
However, most hunters do not have the ability, whether it be the resource (land, equipment, time, cash, etc.) or the knowledge to properly manage for nesting habitat. <<<
You are certainly correct, but some landowners that are also hunters have that ability. The generous season and limit has encouraged those people to spend the money, forgo the income, and do the work to provide that habitat. When turkey and deer were being reestablished in AL, the dcnr talked about their partnership with landowners and the fact they wanted liberal seasons to encourage people to manage for wildlife. It was a unique philosophy that few other states followed, and it resulted in AL having the best turkey hunting in the nation. The current dcnr seldom even mentions that partnership that brought back deer and turkey. Reading their publications, one could get the idea that a certain national turkey organization is responsible for what we have. That ain't the way it happened.
The decline of quail is a good example of the need for landowner management to produce wildlife. Its extremely expensive to manage land for quail and it takes a lot of land to do it. As I'm sure you know, they are much different from turkeys. They can't survive in isolation. I don't know what the minimum amount of land needed to produce quail might be, but I can say 400 acres is not enough. I got my place up to having 2 coveys, but they faded away and now I don't think I have a bird.
But the same efforts to produce quail did indeed work for turkeys. They nest in the cover I provided, and then spread out to the paper company land around me. Everyone in the area benefits, and I'm happy that my neighbors have turkeys to hunt too.
Will the thousands of landowners like me that are passionate enough about turkeys to manage their land for them continue to do it now? Those are the places where turkeys are produced. Has anyone at the dcnr even thought about this? I haven't heard it mentioned. The biggest single landowner in Alabama fails to do this. I cant understand how regulating thousands of people more to do one thing vs managing the tens of thousands of acres that goes unmanaged makes sense. Oddly they are the ones holding studies on this same poorly managed property and the ones that think reducing limit and days is the root cause to this idea of population decline. Thanks forever wild/Socialism you are everything a lot of us thought you would be.
Last edited by Mason85; 02/24/16 04:03 AM.
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: Mason85]
#1662801
02/24/16 04:12 AM
02/24/16 04:12 AM
|
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 36,512 Boxes Cove
2Dogs
Freak of Nature
|
Freak of Nature
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 36,512
Boxes Cove
|
Oct1981, that was a great post.
>>>i believe the science is spot on. Most of you who are so passionate about turkeys also believe this. Its starts at the nest. Birds must have ample nesting habitat not only for the protectiom of the nest but also for a safe brood rearing habitat. It must provide great cover and food to raise a new poult for the first few weeks of life at least until the point at which that bird is able to fly to escape ground predation.
However, most hunters do not have the ability, whether it be the resource (land, equipment, time, cash, etc.) or the knowledge to properly manage for nesting habitat. <<<
You are certainly correct, but some landowners that are also hunters have that ability. The generous season and limit has encouraged those people to spend the money, forgo the income, and do the work to provide that habitat. When turkey and deer were being reestablished in AL, the dcnr talked about their partnership with landowners and the fact they wanted liberal seasons to encourage people to manage for wildlife. It was a unique philosophy that few other states followed, and it resulted in AL having the best turkey hunting in the nation. The current dcnr seldom even mentions that partnership that brought back deer and turkey. Reading their publications, one could get the idea that a certain national turkey organization is responsible for what we have. That ain't the way it happened.
The decline of quail is a good example of the need for landowner management to produce wildlife. Its extremely expensive to manage land for quail and it takes a lot of land to do it. As I'm sure you know, they are much different from turkeys. They can't survive in isolation. I don't know what the minimum amount of land needed to produce quail might be, but I can say 400 acres is not enough. I got my place up to having 2 coveys, but they faded away and now I don't think I have a bird.
But the same efforts to produce quail did indeed work for turkeys. They nest in the cover I provided, and then spread out to the paper company land around me. Everyone in the area benefits, and I'm happy that my neighbors have turkeys to hunt too.
Will the thousands of landowners like me that are passionate enough about turkeys to manage their land for them continue to do it now? Those are the places where turkeys are produced. Has anyone at the dcnr even thought about this? I haven't heard it mentioned. The biggest single landowner in Alabama fails to do this. I cant understand how regulating thousands of people more to do one thing vs managing the tens of thousands of acres that goes unmanaged makes sense. Oddly they are the ones holding studies on this same poorly managed property and the ones that think reducing limit and days is the root cause to this idea of population decline. Thanks forever wild/Socialism you are everything a lot of us thought you would be. Sure they're managing it, just look at Skyline, they've managed to turn it into a ATV/off road park. I'm sure all that riding by the non hunters is great for the wildlife and the hunters "experience."
"Why do you ask"?
Always vote the slowest path to socialism.
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: poorcountrypreacher]
#1662887
02/24/16 05:12 AM
02/24/16 05:12 AM
|
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,249 South Alabama
gobbler
OP
12 point
|
OP
12 point
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,249
South Alabama
|
Oct1981, that was a great post.
>>>i believe the science is spot on. Most of you who are so passionate about turkeys also believe this. Its starts at the nest. Birds must have ample nesting habitat not only for the protectiom of the nest but also for a safe brood rearing habitat. It must provide great cover and food to raise a new poult for the first few weeks of life at least until the point at which that bird is able to fly to escape ground predation.
However, most hunters do not have the ability, whether it be the resource (land, equipment, time, cash, etc.) or the knowledge to properly manage for nesting habitat. <<<
You are certainly correct, but some landowners that are also hunters have that ability. The generous season and limit has encouraged those people to spend the money, forgo the income, and do the work to provide that habitat. When turkey and deer were being reestablished in AL, the dcnr talked about their partnership with landowners and the fact they wanted liberal seasons to encourage people to manage for wildlife. It was a unique philosophy that few other states followed, and it resulted in AL having the best turkey hunting in the nation. The current dcnr seldom even mentions that partnership that brought back deer and turkey. Reading their publications, one could get the idea that a certain national turkey organization is responsible for what we have. That ain't the way it happened.
The decline of quail is a good example of the need for landowner management to produce wildlife. Its extremely expensive to manage land for quail and it takes a lot of land to do it. As I'm sure you know, they are much different from turkeys. They can't survive in isolation. I don't know what the minimum amount of land needed to produce quail might be, but I can say 400 acres is not enough. I got my place up to having 2 coveys, but they faded away and now I don't think I have a bird.
But the same efforts to produce quail did indeed work for turkeys. They nest in the cover I provided, and then spread out to the paper company land around me. Everyone in the area benefits, and I'm happy that my neighbors have turkeys to hunt too.
Will the thousands of landowners like me that are passionate enough about turkeys to manage their land for them continue to do it now? Those are the places where turkeys are produced. Has anyone at the dcnr even thought about this? I haven't heard it mentioned. Couldn't agree more
I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: gobbler]
#1663344
02/24/16 09:54 AM
02/24/16 09:54 AM
|
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 2,921 Huntsville
buckbrush
10 point
|
10 point
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 2,921
Huntsville
|
I agree with these last few posts. I've hunted many different states and by far Alabama WMA are the worst managed state ground I have ever seen.
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. Edmund Burke
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: Turkeymaster]
#1663362
02/24/16 10:06 AM
02/24/16 10:06 AM
|
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 16,565 Montgomery
bamaeyedoc
Old Mossy Horns
|
Old Mossy Horns
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 16,565
Montgomery
|
Change the law if you must but that's when I'll become an outlaw. Shortening the season will only take money out of my pocket and some of my families. I got everything you said in your post except this? Say what? Dr. B
AKA: “Dr. B” Aldeer #121 8-3-2000 Proud alum of AUM, UAB, and UA Member of Team 10 Point 2023-2024 ALdeer Deer Contest Winners
Glennis Jerome "Jerry" Harris 1938-2017 UGA Class of 1960 BS/MS Forestry LTJG, USNR
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: gobbler]
#1667566
02/27/16 11:53 AM
02/27/16 11:53 AM
|
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,249 South Alabama
gobbler
OP
12 point
|
OP
12 point
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,249
South Alabama
|
Heard an interview with the Director this morning and he explained his position on what went down Saturday. In essence, he says there is was no proposal to change the limit or season made. Thats good. However, since maybe members of the selective turkey committee may still monitor this thread, I thought his comments on the biology of limits were interesting and should be posted. Since he is also a wildlife biologist, I figured he would agree with my position on it. His comments were that if the population were declining due to habitat, predators or weather, it was essentially a reproductive and poult recruitment issue. Therefore, he agreed that changing the limit would have NO effect on the population. Didn't matter if the limit was 1 or 21, the population would continue to decline if recruitment was the problem. Glad he supports the premise of this and the other thread. Hope the turkey committee agrees also!
I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: gobbler]
#1670504
03/01/16 06:24 AM
03/01/16 06:24 AM
|
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 4,573 Behind you
Avengedsevenfold
10 point
|
10 point
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 4,573
Behind you
|
All I will chime in with is the following:
Stop throwing ALL of North Alabama under the bus. There are parts of North Alabama that the turkey population is INCREASING.
Yeah, I said it. INCREASING.
While I can only answer for my very small role in that increase, but I it is due to some of us addressing the problem at hand: Nest Predators.
I've taken 33 coons and possums off one property in the last month. Took over 20 off that same property the year before. And took around 30 the year before that.
If you address the problem then you will get the results that you desire. Simple as that. If you don't, you won't.
Carrying a gun isn't comfortable; but at times it is comforting
"Cause the cause for the pause you think you see is really concentration on the steel” NonPoint
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: spitndrum]
#1670572
03/01/16 07:28 AM
03/01/16 07:28 AM
|
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 3,494 Jefferson
Fun4all
10 point
|
10 point
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 3,494
Jefferson
|
I'm just an outsider looking in but will toss my 2 cents in. I think overall the turkey and deer hunting was the best in the 80s and 90s and has went downhill ever since in about every state. The yote population hadn't blown up yet in a lot of states and you had more people trapping. As in any population, protect the females, supply good habitat and keep predators in check and the population has to succeed granted things such as disease and weather doesn't go wrong. It's really that simple. You can raise the limit to 10 birds and the all hens that are able to breed will get bred. Only down side to that is you could end up hearing less and less gobblers each year if the hens are not producing. Then again I bet less than 5% of hunters kill 4 or 5 so it's most likely a moot point and of the ones that do they are already in a turkey rich environment or jumping around to different areas and in either scenario it's not really having that much of an effect.
I can't even fathom how any state that doesn't have a tagging system in place can have any good data. It's a guessing game without one. You were good down till the last two sentences.
Last edited by Fun4all; 03/01/16 07:29 AM.
"After all, it is not the killing that brings satisfaction; it is the contest of skill and cunning. The true hunter counts his achievement in proportion to the effort involved and the fairness of the sport." Dr. Saxton Pope
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: Fun4all]
#1670666
03/01/16 08:51 AM
03/01/16 08:51 AM
|
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 17 Va
spitndrum
spike
|
spike
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 17
Va
|
I'm just an outsider looking in but will toss my 2 cents in. I think overall the turkey and deer hunting was the best in the 80s and 90s and has went downhill ever since in about every state. The yote population hadn't blown up yet in a lot of states and you had more people trapping. As in any population, protect the females, supply good habitat and keep predators in check and the population has to succeed granted things such as disease and weather doesn't go wrong. It's really that simple. You can raise the limit to 10 birds and the all hens that are able to breed will get bred. Only down side to that is you could end up hearing less and less gobblers each year if the hens are not producing. Then again I bet less than 5% of hunters kill 4 or 5 so it's most likely a moot point and of the ones that do they are already in a turkey rich environment or jumping around to different areas and in either scenario it's not really having that much of an effect.
I can't even fathom how any state that doesn't have a tagging system in place can have any good data. It's a guessing game without one. You were good down till the last two sentences. I can delete it lol
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: BREEZE1]
#1670888
03/01/16 11:28 AM
03/01/16 11:28 AM
|
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 17 Va
spitndrum
spike
|
spike
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 17
Va
|
I talked to a guy yesterday that said he knows a guy on the CAB. He said the guy claimed they where finding a lot of turkey nest with un-fertilized eggs is why making the season later. I have my doubt's on that but says that's their claim. That makes no sense whatsoever. That's like the states with only half a day hunting except the last few weeks so not to disturb nesting hens. HELLO, hens are nesting the last 2 weeks not at the beginning of the season
|
|
|
Re: Somebody make a biological case for a later season or lower limit?
[Re: BREEZE1]
#1671088
03/01/16 01:36 PM
03/01/16 01:36 PM
|
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,249 South Alabama
gobbler
OP
12 point
|
OP
12 point
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,249
South Alabama
|
I talked to a guy yesterday that said he knows a guy on the CAB. He said the guy claimed they where finding a lot of turkey nest with un-fertilized eggs is why making the season later. I have my doubt's on that but says that's their claim. I have heard that there are studies from OTHER areas that have seen that. I have not heard that that is being found in Alabama. I would love to see a real study on it, not just speculation. How many nests have any of us disturbed turkey hunting,
I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine
|
|
|
|