Varmint Population in (Northern) California
Posted: Sun May 24, 2009 8:11 pm
Hi All,
There was a time in the not-too-distant past when most everyone you ran into in the woods of California were bear hunters; hunters running only fox and cat were few and far between. These days, it seems that there are a lot more varmint hunters out there, and varmints seem harder to come by.
Given this, the typically cyclical nature of cat populations, and the prohibition against the use of steel traps (one of the most effective means of controlling coyotes), I am curious about how healthy the cat and fox populations are in your area. Are their numbers holding steady? on the increase? going down? Are you finding them in the timber? brush? rolling foothills?
I hunt rolling foothills at the 2000-foot elevation level with a mixture of oaks, pine, manzanita, and chamise. Fox numbers seem to be on the decline, with cat numbers holding steady to slightly decreasing in the past few years.
While I wonder if others in Northern California are experiencing the same observations as I am, I'd be interested in knowing if you varmint hunters in Central and Southern California are faring differently.
There was a time in the not-too-distant past when most everyone you ran into in the woods of California were bear hunters; hunters running only fox and cat were few and far between. These days, it seems that there are a lot more varmint hunters out there, and varmints seem harder to come by.
Given this, the typically cyclical nature of cat populations, and the prohibition against the use of steel traps (one of the most effective means of controlling coyotes), I am curious about how healthy the cat and fox populations are in your area. Are their numbers holding steady? on the increase? going down? Are you finding them in the timber? brush? rolling foothills?
I hunt rolling foothills at the 2000-foot elevation level with a mixture of oaks, pine, manzanita, and chamise. Fox numbers seem to be on the decline, with cat numbers holding steady to slightly decreasing in the past few years.
While I wonder if others in Northern California are experiencing the same observations as I am, I'd be interested in knowing if you varmint hunters in Central and Southern California are faring differently.