Got to hand it to the Ohio Division of Wildlife. When this agency's leaders mess up they do it in style while during the whole time they behave with that deer-in-the-headlights look.
Not since the long-ago time when Ohio
decided to start the waterfowl hunting season at noon on a weekday
has the Wildlife Division so thoroughly tripped in its management
waders and fell face-first into the mud of uncommon sense as it has
with this year's waterfowl hunting seasons.
Back in August when the agency's honchos were mulling how they could mess up a 60-day duck-hunting season framework and a 78-day goose-hunting framework, someone certainly had to capture the First Place prize in making nonsense out of a commonsense bracket of possible seasons.
And there's plenty of blame to go around, too. Take your pick: Wildlife Division's waterfowl
management administrators, agency executives and even the
eight-member Ohio Wildlife Council, which is suppose to go about its work to prevent dumb things from happening, all suffered from a lack of logic.
How else can one explain the cutoff of
all but four days in November for duck hunting in just about the
entire state north of Interstate 70, which the exception of a sliver
of Lake Erie marshland in northwest Ohio?
Yet unspeakably that is precisely what
the Wildlife Division mucked up when it will close the first portion of
the state's North Duck-hunting Zone on Nov. 3 after beginning just 15
days earlier.
Even more baffling was the decision to restart the North Zone's duck-hunting engine on Nov. 30 (yep, two
days BEFORE the beginning of Ohio's firearms deer-hunting season)
and keep it sputtering clear through to Jan. 12.
I don't know about you but after living in Lake County for nearly 64 years I can say without reservations that late December and early January gets a tad chilly. Enough so that Northeast Ohio marches, beaver ponds and farm ponds are typically locked in ice.
Even Al Gore would have to admit that early winter in Northeast Ohio is not the same as early winter in Cancun.
If none of this ducking management
mishmash makes any sense than neither does the Wildlife Division's
madness in establishing the state's Lake Erie Goose-hunting Zone's
season.
Here the Wildlife Division's decision
makers quickly lost their grip on the judicious use of their
facilities.
In the Lake Erie Canada Goose-hunting
Zone, the starting gun went off a full week before that of its
generally respective duck-hunting zone opener. And which, by the way,
also coincided with Ohio's first-ever antlerless-only/muzzle-loader
deer hunt.
“Excuse me? Did I read you correctly,
sir, that the duck and goose openers were a full week apart?”
Oh, yes, you most certainly did, son.
So instead of waterfowlers partaking of
a customary concurrent duck-goose season opener they were left with a
disjointed, far-from-traditional, one opener here and another opener
there format.
The ends are not tied any better,
either.
For instance – and we'll stick with
the northern part of the state for argument sake – waterfowlers can
shoot ducks through Nov. 3 for the first part of the season but not
Canada geese in the state's Lake Erie Goose-hunting Zone.
Yet these same eager waterfowlers will
see their Canada goose season reboot on Nov. 9 although all ducks
will be off limits. That is until (gulp) Nov. 30.
The reasonable and most user-friendly
format would have both the goose and duck seasons begin on the same
Saturday, run concurrently through to the day before the statewide
firearms deer-hunting season. And then begin the day following the
gun season's end until all of the allocated days for each season
reaches its trail head.
Instead, what the Wildlife Division's
waterfowl biologists, their Columbus bosses - and ultimately the
agency's Wildlife Council's eight handlers - have done is so badly
gerrymandered the state's duck- and goose-hunting seasons that
confusion and disappointment has ultimately tainted whatever respect
the state's waterfowlers had in the agency's ability to keep things
simple and practical.
Oh, for the uncomplicated days of noon
waterfowl openers, duck point systems and 30-day seasons. And
managers who knew what the heck they were doing, too.
YES!!!!! I agree totally - it's not worth spending $ 0n license,stamps & blinds for 15 daysof hunting. We remove our blind from Nimisula Lake on Thanksgiving weekend to prevent "freezing in".
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