Not happy with Manitoba Conservation

my buddy lives at redvers. says many Manitoba natives killing a large amount of moose

Wardens investigated a family near where I grew up in the past few weeks. They found 42 deer hanging in an outbuilding.... Everyone involved was either status or had a harvester card, no charges laid since they couldn't prove night lighting on the harvests cards or that they were selling the meat.

By the same token my brother in law's father had two separate night lighters caught on one of his fields in the span of one week, both white and out of season (rifle in archery season). The problem is widespread, covers most of our species of fish and game and is multicultural. I figure what we really need is a pile more funding for actual enforcement of existing laws. Seems like a drastic number of offices around the province are vastly understaffed for the amount of territory they cover. While treaty status are permitted to nightlight, there are a number of offenses they can be charged with like shooting off roads, private property, etc.... And like I said, it's not just them. I've worked all over the province, there are areas where poaching is probably more widespread than actual licensed hunting....
 
Manitoba Wildlife Federation is working hard right now to eradicate the unsafe and unsustainable practice of nightlighting. Obviously the Manitoba government has the power to outlaw the practice however has been reluctant to do so because they don't want to alienate the Metis. Neither Manitoba Government nor Manitoba Metis Federation have shown initiative to end the practice on their own, which shows how incompetent these people are who we have to deal with.

And yes, kennymo, more enforcement of existing laws would help. In terms of funding, Manitoba Conservation receives 138 million dollars annually in budget and generates 35 million dollars in revenue via license sales, fur & timber royalties etc.

I think poaching is one of the most difficult problems to solve. However, we aren't going to solve any issues, especially the issue of nightlighting and hunter harvest rights if we don't join forces and stand up for ourselves as one voice - we must all become members and support our own federation...the Manitoba Wildlife Federation!

Start calling your member of parliament and wildlife managers and letting them know you do not support nightlighting or metis hunter harvest rights and that it is time to end both practices, they are unsafe and unsustainable.
 
In 2012, I took my son on a moose hunting trip, in northern Mb. We came across a group of First Nations fisherman, who had a quota for 50,000lbs of fish. We asked to buy some walleye off of them and they laughed and said " we don't sell gold" he went on to explain that he gets $3.50/lb market price, and that it is also matched by the EI, Northern affairs, Hydro, and band subsidies, so he was essentially making $17.50 per pound. He went on to tell us, how the previous year, they brought in a reefer trailer, and harvested 23 moose, cows, calves and bulls. As we continued on our hunt, we came across abandoned fish camps. The site was despicable, garbage everywhere, blah, blah, blah. But what my eyes couldnt believe, was the wastage of fish. On three seperate occasions, we encountered waste piles, 20 ft by 20 ft, 2 -3 feet in depth. There was pike, whitefish, goldeye, tulibee, sucker. They were keeping only walleye, everything else was thrown on the shore. My 12 year old son, asked me how they could do that, and I could not provide him with an answer. That area is totally wiped out of moose now, and in 3 trips to that area, totalling 30 days, we never once saw a Mb conservation vehicle, let alone officer.
The second part of this story, involves bears. I grew up as a farm kid, and I get protecting livestock, Hay, etc. My son and I have grown to love bear hunting. An area we hunt near the parkalnd, has phenomenal opportuinities, but those oppertunties may not last long. I was informed of a bee farmer, that has his employees carry firearms in all their trucks, and they shoot bears, on site, year round. Doesnt matter if they are near the bee operation or not. An acquaintance told me of his neighbour, who bragged about shooting 180 black bears this past year. Any bear he saw on his property was shot on site and left where it fell.
both situations are a result of lack of funding for MB Conservation, and a government that lacks the testicular fortitude to stand up to special interest groups. They deer population warranted a complete closure of the season, province wide, but the province did not want to loose the funding that licenses carry. So now, guys are shooting spiker bucks as meat deer, and we are wiping out the genitics of big whitetails for generations to come. Our province can not support the unregulated harvesting of animals from special interest groups, and until a government levels the playing field, and actually has a method to hold people accountable, our natural resources will continue to be depleted to dangerous levels.
 
Today was the first day of rifle season and I have already come across three does that where shot and left.
Bucks only is a good idea in theory but I think a lot of hunters need a little education on identifying the gender of a deer. Do they shoot first then check??
WTF is with some people??????
Even more patrolling by conservation officers can't stop stupidity.
 
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