Sure the weather was warm, but it isn't like the deer just evaporate when it's nice out and come back when the weather gets nasty. They have to be somewhere, and if many parties in the area are reporting noticeably lower deer numbers, that means it's not that the deer are just somewhere else. If you get enough guys around a section, there really shouldn't be many deer that escape completely unseen.
18 guys limiting out every year for years, and then have a crappy year where they only shoot 2 does. Isn't it just a matter of time?
"No single raindrop believes it's responsible for the flood". Just as no concerned deer hunter that drops the doe to fill the freezer is responsible for the low deer numbers.
Don't get me wrong, I don't shotgun hunt, but I have absolutely nothing against shotgun hunters, nor am I trying to bash them. My family shotgun hunts, I just choose not to participate.
The problem that overwhelmingly covers the state is the lower deer numbers (less the isolated spots). I've spoken with many of the DNR representatives in the North East region about the status of the deer population in that area because that's where I hunt. They tried to drastically reduce the antlerless tags in that region as the population dropped much faster than most, and only because people were doing what they were asked to do, shoot does. Well, when it came time to release the new antlerless quotas, the DNR didn't get the say-so on the deer population, so they didn't get the reduction in tags like they wanted, and people will shoot them even if the population is low because they have a tag in their pocket. It's our own responsibility to manage our natural resources, and if that means writing a letter to your legislators regarding the deer population and the inability of the dnr to do their jobs, so be it. Because right now, we have a legislature that sees deer as a nuisance, and will completely overpower the DNR if we don't completely irradicate the deer from the state. Want proof? Ask about the agreement that was made between farm bureau and the DNR regarding the deer population.
When the agreement was made a few years ago to start lowering the deer population, there was a set population level that was agreed upon between the DNR and insurance companies like farm bureau. Now that many areas of the state are at or below these levels, they (the insurance companies) want to lower the goal even lower. What will happen when we get to that level?