How to Improve your Hunting Access 2019

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How to Improve your Hunting Access 2019

By: John A. Baden, Ph.D.
Posted on October 01, 2019 FREE Insight Topics:

Help Wanted signs are now even more common than No Hunting Signs.


This has positive implications for people who want to hunt our place.  We don’t charge dollars to hunt here, say $125 per person for deer and $500 to hunt elk.  Instead, we trade hunting rights for work on our recreation land and waters.  

Why do we need more help? Our commercial ag land is well taken care of by the neighboring Bos family.  The reason is simple: Our amenity-recreational lands and waters require maintenance and grooming to make them easily accessible, especially to people with handicaps.  We want easy access for people with limited mobility, for example wounded warriors and those coping with cancer.    

For decades we’ve offered our spring creek and five ponds to Bozeman’s Cancer Support Community, Eagle Mount’s Big Sky Kids, and other people who deserve and need special consideration.  I was a founder of Warriors and Quiet Waters (WQW).  In the beginning years all WQW groups of injured service men and women learned to fly-fish in our spring creek and ponds.  Then, after becoming comfortable with the fundamentals of casting, volunteer guides took the warriors drifting on the Yellowstone, Madison and other big rivers.* 

None of the warriors arrived as fly-fishers and all suffered disabilities of varying severity.  Ramona and I wanted to minimize obstructions to their learning.  To increase the accessibility and comfort of fishing our place, we must “police” it.  This includes removing dead branches from casting sites, weed-whacking, and mowing paths.  Every few years clearing beaver cut trees from shore waters is a big job.   These important tasks require willing workers.  Since neither our hunting nor fishing generates revenue, we rely on volunteers.   Great skills aren’t necessary but a willingness to help others is.  

Opening day is the most sought after, closing day the least favored.  Scheduling preference is based on contributions.  A person who works a day with professional chainsaw and pickup ranks above someone bringing a hand rake.  

I can tell when hunting season approaches—and not only by seeing leaves changing color and hearing elk bugling while I'm in the quiet of our hot tub.  How?  I get phone calls and visits from ‘friends”, some I’ve not heard from since last hunting season. 

 “Hey John, can I come out and hunt your ranch again this year?”  My usual response is: “You know we get lots of requests and only allow one party at a time.  I’ll put your name on our list.”   

 A few people consistently volunteer their help in maintaining our fishery and trails.  I place them high on our hunting (and fishing) access list.   Others never volunteer.  To them I say: “I’ll put your name on our list.”   And I do—at the bottom.  Of course, they could earn their way up—we always need help keeping our fishery attractive and accessible.

Ramona and I manage our ranch for both commercial agriculture and wildlife.  Hunting is important to game management—and to controlling the number of elk ravaging our haystacks, breaking down fences, and damaging irrigation lines.  Also, while I respect the hunting tradition, I don’t quite understand some men’s passion for hunting. It must be like opera: Some individuals organize their lives around the Santa Fe opera season, others the Montana elk season.  

Montana's elk and deer rifle season traditionally begins the fourth week of October and ends the Sunday after Thanksgiving.   I am usually happy it's over.  The reason? Rationing hunters' access to our ranch is a growing problem.  I receive calls early in the morning and late at night, some from people I hadn't heard from since last year's season.  Total strangers drive into our driveway asking to hunt.  I understand why, people see herds of elk on our place. The elk however, are nearly as obvious as our steers, especially when in a herd of a hundred or more and in sight from U.S. 191 or Cottonwood Road south of Gallatin Gateway.

Over the past two decades, the Montana average success for bulls and cows combined has been roughly twenty percent.  The average Montana hunters spends about ten days hunting before killing an elk. And only about four percent of elk hunters kill a 6x6 or larger bull.    

In contrast success rates on our place are high indeed--and hunting is easy.  Many simply walk hidden in the dry Kleinschmidt Canal to approach elk feeding in our alfalfa fields.  Only the next quarter or half mile requires stealth and hunting prowess.  Tom Dickson is editor of Montana Outdoors magazine, a publication of the Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks.  He wrote: "The best way to get access to private land is to ask politely well before the season begins."    Even better is to offer help. **  With excellent hunting success and a price of zero dollars, demand far exceeds our supply.  This means I must create a way to ration access.   Here is my system for rationing elk hunting. 

First are those few who work at the ranch.  Second, I'll give favorable consideration to those who volunteer for Cancer Support Community, Eagle Mount, Warriors and Quiet Waters, and similar groups' recreational programs on our ranch.  

Third, hunters should read and be able to discuss Jim Posewitz's Beyond Fair Chase: The Ethics and Tradition of Hunting. I'll also direct them to FREE Insights on hunting and conservation.  If they aren't interested in reading our thought on conservation and wildlife, I'm not interested in having them shoot here.

Finally, did the hunter display gratitude for access?  One deer hunter gave us a gift certificate and another some fine lumber.  An elk hunter spent a week working on FREE's office addition.  Others helped out with our fishery.

Successful hunters who neglect us, not even offering us meat from the animals we fed, are off the list.  If they ask next year, I'll give them this insight.  They know why we must ration access and surely, they'll understand how we allocate hunting and fishing privileges.


 

* f.n.  http://www.free-eco.org/insights/article/lets-resolve-reward-our-wounded-warriors 

** If you would like to hunt or fish, this property please notify jbaden@free-eco.org with your proposal and skill set.

 

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