I like it but have a couple of questions
1. Would the population be reduced?, one assumes yes with money from the tags etc but then still no control over how deep the cull/manage
2. Would you expect us as NZ hunters to buy a tag to hunt a deer....
H
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If they paid for tails that would help. Surely it must be worth it to get rid of the horrible deer. Forest and Bird should be sponsoring us. We are the solution. Ta da!
Ive actually sent out a couple of letters for access to private land around the Dunedin and Catlins areas but havent heard back yet, might never hear back. But yeah the catlins public areas are chock full of deer and they do leave their mark. Thats the place I managed to run into a red within 5 meters. Not sure if the properties mentioned in the article are interested in a hunter like me in there, as I just shoot the first thing I find and leave with meat. But if they would let me in I would happily shoot more than 1 if I happen upon more than 1. The little Tautuku forest huts run by forest and bird are a nice place to stay as well. If they let us know problem areas and gave us easy access, hundreds of hunters including myself would even be happy to pay a fee to get some venison.
There are some good people in Doc.
In the top of the south at least they seam to be able to work in with very proactive Nelson and Marlborough NZDAs to reduce numbers in problem areas.
And for the first time in 30-50 years hunters can now fly into NLNP in a block system.
It is expected that you shoot all ungulates you can do humanly and report sightings and kills.
The pessimist in me says this is just letting the hunters have a go before the green rain comes to target the ungulates.
Yes it is illegal to target ungulates with 1080 but we all know it is done in problem areas under the guise off rat or possum numbers.
The optimist in me sees this as having great potential for a real partnership between Doc and hunters in the management of our backcountry.
NI vs SI poses very different problems for controlling wild ungulates.
"Hunting and fishing" fucking over licenced firearms owners since ages ago.
308Win One chambering to rule them all.
Foot hunters couldn't control deer 50- 80 years ago when there were real trained "guns' being paid to achieve who could and would live and survive under the harshest conditions. There is only one thing outside poison today to keep numbers under reasonable control which is the good old chopper.
I disagree with one aspect of your statement.
Hunters can be conservationists too. I work in biosecurity, have worked for DoC for a few years as well, and regularly volunteer trapping in the Northern Ruahines and Kawekas. To draw a line in the sand saying you’re a hunter not a conservationist ignores a lot of nuance around why people do the things they do. Some guys shoot whatever they see, others shoot bugger all. But the net effect is on the whole, positive for biodiversity. But only in the fact that a deer is dead.
But I may also be misinterpreting your statement as well.
Determining carrying capacity of an area requires informed data specific to local ecosystem type and maybe indeed by catchment. Figure out the numbers of deer currently in there the best way you can and then aim for having a lower density herd. @Gibo is right in saying that they need to be managed as a resource, but who pays and who says.
Yes and the chopper gives access to foot hunters now.....if they are allowed to land in the park that is.
This screenshot was sopost to be included in my above post.
It's in reference to the first round of ungulate control in NLNP.
Ps can't upload the screenshot as it exceeds the forum limit for file type?
Must be 1/10th the size of a photo so beyond me..
"Hunting and fishing" fucking over licenced firearms owners since ages ago.
308Win One chambering to rule them all.
I'll try this instead.
Thank you for taking the time to write to me and provide us with results, information, and observations from your hunting trip - this is really important and valuable information for us.
Deer
Chamois
Total animals
Seen
330
83
413
Shot
78
14
92
Other pests reported shot: 1 cat and 3 Canada geese
Sex ratio:
51% of deer shot were female (49% males)
21% of Chamois shot were female (79% male)
"Hunting and fishing" fucking over licenced firearms owners since ages ago.
308Win One chambering to rule them all.
@hebe the fundamental difference in what we are saying is I was speaking in the most basic generalities and you used nuance! Perhaps a better way of looking at it is a modern affluent culture might see 'pest' animals destroying an ecosystem and be prepared to expend the time and effort into attempting to eradicate the damaging species to preserve the whole. By contrast others (for example people in desperate poverty trying to keep their family alive by hunting meat) have a huge vested interest in harvesting this meat in a long term sustainable way, or even letting the game numbers build up to provide plenty for the future. In many respects these two approaches are incompatible, which I think is why this whole discussion will always be difficult to resolve.
As an example I hand sowed 100,000 nikau seeds in a bush remnant gully about 15 or 20 years ago and had masses of palms up to about 1m high, now they are almost all gone due to the deer. Preserving long term access to venison in this gully is a very low priority for me. But at the same time a bloke on a lifestyle block down the road has allegedly been actively releasing fallow deer so he can hunt them, and has zero interest in preserving natural biodiversity. Can't keep everyone happy.
there is one major difference....today the herds havent had the big block of time to build up or the big areas at back of nowhere to do it...we are so much more mobile these days...eg big station shepherds zip out back on side by side in hour at most...what used to be days ride on horse... places werent visited for months on end,now get "seen' on regular basis.
but 100% agree the chopper is the ultimate control tool......controlling the use of the tool for maximum benifit for all is the tricky bit.
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