three11 wrote:GordonGekko wrote:I really believe we need to all step back and ask a simple question, if there is evidence spinning wing decoys are harming the waterfowl population for future generations am I willing to quit using them?
And what is the answer?
I have heard that they are killing more juvenile ducks up north by using spinners. But does that mean that the waterfowl population is suffering because of it? Do the juvenile ducks lay more eggs than mature ducks? I don't know.
I think everyone on here will agree that they give an advantage [i]some[i] of the time. Is it enough that it will harm the waterfowl population for future generations? If it won't, let them use them. If it will, let's do away with them.
The only thing spinning on me is my head,
-Three
I was asked about this last night. gator touched on some key points. As someone who has hunted over one many times, but prefers not too, let me say this plainly so my rock chunking doesn't cause my glass house to collapse: it must end. the sooner the better.
My single, greatest issue with spinners is based on empirical data from the past decade since their inception and is exactly WHY upper flyway council participants did not join Arkansas: the upper flyway states harvest has increased as much as 600%. At that same time, juvenile mallard harvest in states like Arkansas and Mississippi has DECREASED ABOUT SEVENTY-FIVE PERCENT (75%).
Those huge flocks of 250-300 mallards that used to work over the decoys as recently as the mid-1990s that many here are too young to remember even though they've duck hunted for 10 years? Gone. They died up north while they were still brown, pin-feathered little ducks stretching their wings for the first time. Robo duck.
There will always be migrating ducks in the South, who ever heard of the imprinting syndrome the waterfowler is talking about? I'll try to post pictures in the near future of full-blown migrator Canada goose hunts on the Mississippi River south of Greenville. Three to 4 decades ago, the South wintered the big migrator honkers. No more. Not ever again. And cracker eating residents are a very poor consolation.
I don't hate on anyone that uses robo. To each their own. Rhetorically speaking, however, I now choose to swing wood rather than aluminum. My kids have no choice, but they'll appreciate it in years to come.
It'd be easy to get mad at the State of Mississippi for having shown a complete lack of testicular veracity in this regard, but I know and respect too many of them and understand that non-biological-related political pressures are what they are. Our state dnr biologists are without peer; I cannot and will not fault them. What disappoints me most about this issue is that the federal agency entrusted with the conservation of the resource - the US Fish and Wildlife Service's Office of Migratory Birds - has completely turned a blind eye to the issue. Let the states hash it out. Its easier to administratively ignore it, to apparantly appease their upper flyway council members (and if you'll remember: former director Rappaport-Clarkes' renigged of framework dates with southern flyway states at the behest of their northern counterparts, is why Senator Lott got involved in the first place. It's all politics). And it's one heckuva lot cheaper to ignore the issue, too. Put 10-20 million dollars into science-based decision making, or operate refuges? At any rate, they've remained absolutely disengaged for the past 10 years and will do so until someone forms a non-profit org, raises charitable contributions, and legally takes them task.
But hey. Maybe we can all just sit back, continue using our Highway Flyway-endorsed robos "like everyone else" and bitching about the good ol' days when we killed more mallards. After all, we have to do something during those long, duckless lulls in the blind. Eventually, like the migrator honkers of yester-year, maybe we southerner waterfowlers won't have to worry about it anymore.
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