From what I know thus far, this could be an exciting regulation year for Maryland hunters, especially turkey hunters.
Let me back up for a second. I like the way the Maryland Wildlife and Heritage Service goes about changing hunting regulations. I don’t know how they could be any more transparent or open.
Here is a quick description of how it works. The agency people get their scientific minds together and come up with any changes they think would expand hunting opportunities without hurting wildlife populations. They bicker and cypher and crunch without us ever hearing any of their family feuds.
At the end of that step, they come up with what they call concepts. Those concepts are then run by the rest of the agency people and also the Maryland Natural Police. After all, it is the guys with the badges and pepper spray that have to deal with those changes in real time on the side of a hill or deep in the swamp.
Those concepts are then presented to a group of stakeholders. I’m talking about outdoor writers and rod and gun groups, etc. There are plenty of rod and gun groups that represent everything from ducks to deer, from bunnies to bears.
I’m surprised that a state chapter of the Cousins of the Furry Little Woods Pig has not formed to represent groundhogs. But then again, groundhogs are known liars. Examples of those fabrications will be evident Tuesday in places such as Punxsutawney.
After the stakeholders push and pull and grin and groan at the concepts, they are finally made into formal proposals that will be taken before the public during regulation hearings in March. Even then they can change, based upon public reaction.
Anyway, the agency has concepts right now that will allow Maryland turkey hunters to kill a bird of either sex in the autumn hunt and still take two bearded gobblers the following spring. Can I get a BOOOYAH? I’ve been hoping for that one for a long time.
The biologists are not at all concerned about such a rule harming the birds. In fact, they say that even if the fall kill doubles it would have no negative impact.
Informally proposed as well is a change for the spring season, that being the legalization of all-day spring gobbler hunting for the final two weeks of the five-week season. Such a move would allow more young people to hunt after they get out of school.
Realize now that any turkey hunting changes that are approved would not kick in until the fall hunt of 2010 and the spring hunt of 2011.
Also on the table at this point is the changing of the regional deer hunting boundaries.
Region A, now just Garrett and Allegany counties, would expand to include a portion of Washington County. The change would make deer hunting units 250 and 251 (see page 40 of the Maryland Guide to Hunting and Trapping) a part of Region A, and would include public hunting areas such as Indian Springs, Sideling Hill and Prather’s Neck.
The reasoning, agency officials say, is that the deer herds there have been reduced substantially and should no longer be managed under the liberal bag limits of Region B. Those limits, you may already know, allow hunters there to take two bucks and 10 does in each of the bow, firearms and muzzleloader seasons. Yepper! I’m talking three dozen legal deer.
I haven’t seen anything on crossbows yet. I haven’t seen anything on changes to the deer bag limit in Garrett and Allegany. If I do, I’ll let you know.
Contact Outdoor Editor Mike Sawyers at msawyers@times-news.com.
Michael A Sawyers - Outdoors
Conceive, propose, finalize
- Michael A Sawyers - Outdoors
-
-
Worm dunkers still persona non grata
The studyWhen Bob Hilderbrand was an undergraduate student at Frostburg State University, he had a part-time job electrofishing the upper tributaries of the Savage River and reporting the results to Ray Morgan at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science - Appalachian Lab. -
They have their ways
“Brrrrrrrt! Brrrrrrrt!” my phone vibrates in my shirt pocket. Sometimes when that happens I think that I just burped.“Hello?” -
Md. hunt rules being formed
The Maryland Wildlife & Heritage Service, currently in the early stages of setting hunting regulations for the next two years, envisions no changes to the deer bag limits in Region A (Garrett, Allegany and western Washington counties).On the other hand, substantial changes are being eyeballed for Region B, which is all of Maryland from Clear Spring eastward to the Atlantic Ocean. -
Officers allowed to enter
Is it legal for Maryland Natural Resources Police officers to walk onto your private land?
-
Wapiti survey begins
What’s up with this elk stuff anyway?
I’m speaking, of course, about the news announced this past August that some folks are going to look around Garrett and Allegany counties to see if it would be feasible to reintroduce Rocky Mountain elk. Elk used to live here, you know. -
Jury still out on Marcellus shale drilling
Mother Earth, having been around as long as she has, should be given the right to choose elective surgery when needed rather than have exploratory surgery forced upon her.
-
Gobblers hunted on Sundays; sun still rises
See. It wasn’t the end of the world.
Well, wait a minute. I better check before I speak too quickly.
Getting on the Internet, hmmmm, hmm! Yahoo now. Hmmmm! Nope, nothing there. Checking Bing. OK. Now MSN. -
2011 was a very (insert adjective) year
As January started, grumbling could be heard on both sides of the North Branch of the Potomac River.
-
Progress in eye of beholder
Folks in the state-run hunting and fishing industry are always looking for ways to attract new license buyers.
-
W.Va. buck kill up
I have always thought that the wildlife biologists for the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources were brave. Each year, about the middle of November, they predict the buck kill for the upcoming firearms season.
- More Michael A Sawyers - Outdoors Headlines
-





