Here is the complete ruling by the judge. 48 pages of light reading, though I doubt most won't bother:
https://2zk8ci15bz0240i2m999gkf1-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Grizzly-bear-ruling.pdf
This was certainly expected. The battle is just beginning, it should prove interesting to see how this plays out. Those who want to see the grizz delisted and managed partly by hunting are no doubt out numbered and financed as well...
The southern end of Skyline tends to have more deer and as a result more hunters/pressure. The more open eastern side of the top holds deer as well. The scrub oak is thick and nasty and the sage around the lower areas also holds deer. It's big country with a lot of options. There is also...
The OTC elk hunts in Utah are tough, to say the least. The North slope area is rugged and a long ways in on the trail heads. It gets a lot of pressure. The farther east of hiway 150 you get, the better, generally. The South slope area has more elk by a fair amount, but also has more hunters...
lol...the link works for me just fine. Here's the title of the article, just google it. :0)
Navigating the Anthropocene: embracing compassion and empathy for the grizzly bears in the age of uncertainty and unpredictability
The Skyline rd does indeed get very crowded, but it's a very long road. All along it virtually any canyon has deer. Most of the hunters there will not venture very far down the canyons, they can be deep and steep. I tend to hunt the east side of the road for that reason. The unit has a lot...
Pop's was the instigator to my hunting adventures, although he died when I was 16. I took to the forests, fields and streams myself afterwards and became totally immersed in the outdoor world of hunting and fishing. Honestly, since the beginning as a very young lad, I've no doubt this...
https://medium.com/@gbryja/navigating-the-anthropocene-embracing-compassion-and-empathy-for-the-grizzly-bears-in-the-age-of-800e61b691c2
"Aldo Leopold, in 1933, first described wildlife management as “the art of making land produce sustained annual crops of wild game for recreational use.” [1]...
IF the EAJA was reworked and these type of suits from these type of serial litigators no longer fell under it's reimbursement statutes, does anyone think it would seriously reduce not only these type of litigation's, but the number of them as well?