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Cougar Hunting Roundup 2007
Mountain lion numbers are up around most of the West. In fact, Idaho managers are calling one part of their state “cat heaven.” Here’s where to start your prowl. (January 2007)
Of all North American big-game animals, the cougar is perhaps the most mysterious, glamorous, and hardest to hunt. Critics of cougar hunting abound. California has outlawed it. But in the rest of the West, mountain lion hunting is alive and well, especially in the Rocky Mountain states. We took a look at the overall situation and gathered information from various state wildlife agencies to help hunters line up a cougar hunt in 2007. NEW MEXICO UTAH “We lowered cougar populations during the drought years to reduce the impact on our stressed deer herds,” said Kevin Brunell, Utah Mammals Program coordinator. “There are still quite a number of cats. We set up our hunting three ways. We have units that are limited-entry, and we have limits that start out being limited-entry, then change, based on the number of lions taken.” The state keeps track of kills through a call-in line and Web site. Harvest numbers are updated daily. Once a unit’s optimum quota is reached, the unit closes. WYOMING The season runs from September to March, but the snowy months -- November through January -- are the best for hunting lions. The state also operates a quota system by hunt units. Wyoming also has a hotline and Web site where hunters can check if a unit is still open. Contrast the unit-by-unit approach used by Utah and Wyoming with that of Nevada and Arizona, which are wide open for cougar hunting. NEVADA Getting a cougar tag in Nevada is an over-the-counter deal, he said. Anybody who wants one can get one. “Our regulations are as liberal as anywhere in the West. We have places here that unless you have good dogs and a snowmobile, you are going to be chasing them forever. There’s abundant opportunity.” ARIZONA Arizona doesn’t have quotas by game management units, but does have areas where the state has identified harvest objectives, where lion predation is affecting bighorn sheep or deer. Most hunters here either own dogs or hire a houndsman as a guide. But a growing number of hunters are also using predator calls to lure cats within shooting distance. |
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