I agree about Ripley being a different deal. No reason to deal with all the people for seeing a deer or two. I would guess 4.5% decrease as bowhunters would rarely miss out on a season after all the summer prep. I will buy my one tag again this year but I have no expectations of filling it unless I get some buck luck later in the season.I'd be surprised if archery license sales drop off more than 10% from last year. Ripley is a separate deal. My group didn't apply this year, but we'll all be buying archery tags. I'll guess down 6.5%.
...Pick your choice and post your exact guess for license sales compared to 2014 opening day.
Kind of like the Price is Right.
Sorry, you have all underbid.
I believe she may have been promoted for adding 'lazy hunters' to the DNR rhetoric box.
Answer- archery or crossbow hunters in Lottery areas can kill a doe. They think it will be easy.2014 - 61,967
2015 - 62,969
sales up 1.6% as of opening weekend
I still don't understand this "loophole". If firearm hunters can't kill a doe why can archery hunters?
The data also reveal a troubling statistic for the agency: total bow license sales of 132,897 were 4% lower than at the same time in 2014. Deer hunting license sales are the biggest source of hunting program revenue for the DNR.
The report showed 42,245 total crossbow licenses sold through last Sunday, up 16% from the same time in 2014, and 90,652 total archery licenses sold, down 11%. The archery licenses are for users of vertical bows, including compounds, recurves and stick bows.