Telemark
5 year old buck +
Let me go on record as saying I emphatically wish baiting was outlawed during deer season, but supplemental feeding allowed outside of deer season. Of course, all this hinges on food plots being legal. My own selfish desires.
Below is a picture including the area where I was in a hunting lease for bear. The openings you see are mostly new to a few year old clearcuts. The darker green is pine plantations which are usually cut at about 24 years. 99% of mast producing hardwood has been removed. Clearing or maintaining a clearing - as for a food plot is not permitted. Some timber companies do not allow planting at all. By far the majority of this ground - 100,000âs of thousands of acres in this picture alone are almost impenetrable - and for sure - so thick hunting is not even a thought âin the woodsâ. Most deer are killed as they cross a road or enter a 1 yr old - or less - clearcut.
Deer dogging has been practiced in these areas for years - baiting is a much newer practice. The point being - if you shut down deer dogs and baiting - there would be so many deer they would be the size of a black lab, not to mention, you probably could not drive through the area without hitting one. And, it would become a breeding nest of CWD.
So the question becomes - without baiting and or deer dogging - how do you harvest enough deer to keep the area from becoming over populated? While I am against baiting, I am not against deer dogging - by itself. But deer dogging almost always brings problems with it - in the form of the dogs getting off the lease onto a lease where they dont approve of dogging. Deer dogging used to be the main form of deer hunting in this area forty years and before. We rabbit hunt, bear hunt, bird hunt with dogs. What makes hunting a deer with a dog unethical?
These are questions a commissioner, but not a biologist, probably needs to answer. How to get enough deer killed to satisfy the biologists, without allowing baiting or dogging - and pleasing a majority of hunters?
No easy answers.
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To the first point, traditions are not inherently ethical. Slavery is a good example.
To your second point, you made it quite clear that the way they manage the land is what's causing the problem. So to answer your question, they should manage their land differently if they want to shoot more deer.
Your assertion that it would necessarily become a hotbed for CWD and tiny deer is a false premise and calls for speculation. I have not seen any convincing evidence that this would necessarily be the case or that it is even likely. I also have not seen convincing evidence that small body size is inherently problematic for deer. In fact animals small for their species tend to live longer.