If you asked them if they supported hunting, or supported rich people ‘trophy hunting’, being prioritized over locals hunting for food, many would say no.
All in the wording
But also…. It’s New Mexico. Many of the people you’d interview are addicted to drugs and might try to steal your car.
It is more than the Montana tag usually auctioned for. (Which means going to a raffle was a good choice)
I just looked it up here:
https://www.huntinfool.com/resources/statewide-permits
Look at what other states bring in in auctions. Probably hard to get numbers on what they bring in in...
Somewhere in the middle there’s probably an answer.
NM gives unit wide transferable elk tags to people with very small parcels
I own enough land in Montana, that if it were set up like NM I could probably get one. I spray the weeds and provide winter range on my 20 acres. To think I could...
On page 9, we went from eplus is good for the trustees because of the revenue from tags, to its good for the trustees because of the 4.6% tax off the sale of tags.
Show me a trust that accepts 95.4% of its value being diverted away from the beneficiaries.
Any recommendations for roof racks? We have a rubicon we want to get one for putting bags/gear or skis up there.
Rode in another Jeep that had one and the damn thing sounded like an aluminum barrel full of screws rattling around?
So I guess the question is, roof rack that doesn’t rattle...
What is always funny about these conversations is seeing people that can’t and probably never will be able to afford a private elk tag, arguing with people that can, that privatization of wildlife is a better way to go.
I don’t think it matters if privatization works better or not (it doesn’t).
If we wanted to increase the human population, instead of child tax credits, we could just forcefully impregnate all women of child bearing years. It would work better. Wouldn’t make it okay.
The public trust...
I drove through south central Montana and then into Wyoming a few days ago. The difference in wildlife, especially mule deer, on that side of the border is obvious.
There may be other licenses or FAA exemptions, but I have a FAA part 107 license for my land survey business
It’s illegal to let the drone out of my visual line of sight. That really restricts range, if operated legally.