Montana Land Aquisition

Fritz the Cat

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 11, 2015
Posts
5,014
Likes
555
Points
413
Field and Stream
Field and Stream

FollowView Profile

Montana Land Board Approves Purchase of Thousands of Acres of Prime Deer and Elk Habitat​

Travis Hall - 4h ago
React14 Comments|


1667350148257.png

A recent vote by the Montana Department of Natural Resources & Conservation Land Board will set aside 5,700 acres of state-managed public land in the Big Sky State. The new public land will provide access to an additional 100,000 acres owned by both the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the United States Forest Service (USFS). The land sits in the central part of Montana at the base of the Big Snowy Mountains. It is being sold to the state for $8.2 million by a local children’s hospital.
The state acquired the land for $8.2 million
The state acquired the land for $8.2 million© John Morrison via Getty

With the October 17 vote to approve the purchase of the soon-to-be Big Snowy Mountain Wildlife Management Area (WMA), the Land Board concluded a three-year effort to allow the state to acquire the property. The purchase was met with widespread support from several conservation groups including Backcountry Hunters & Anglers, the Montana Wildlife Federation, and the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.
The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (RMEF) worked behind the scenes to facilitate the project and has pledged a $250,000 grant to help with startup infrastructure and management of the property. “Elk management benefits come with this project,” RMEF Senior Lands Program Manager Mike Mueller told the Helena Independent Record. “Fish, Wildlife & Parks reports population objectives are over 900 percent above objective there, and a contributing factor is a lack of public access. So this is a public access project.”

The property will provide access to the BLM’s 6,936-acre Twin Coulee Wilderness Study Area along with the USFS’s 88,196-acre Big Snowy Wilderness Study Area. Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks will pull 75 percent of the purchase funds for the Big Snowy WMA from federal Federal Pittman-Roberston dollars, while the remaining 25 percent will come from state-managed coffers funded by hunting license sales. In late August, the FWP Fish and Game Commission voted unanimously to approve the Big Snowies acquisition. During that meeting, FWP Lands Program Manager Bill Schenk said the newly-acquired property will preserve valuable wintering grounds for elk, whitetail deer, mule deer, antelope, and black bear. According to FWP, the area also hosts many non-game species as well, including 22 “species of concern.”
The Montana Land Board vote came with only one abstention, which was cast by board member and Montana Attorney General Alex Knudsen. “I don’t think it’s a surprise to anyone in here, given my previous comments, that I’m not going to vote for this. I’m opposed to this. I’ve made that clear to anyone that’s come to talk to me about this,” Knudsen said. “I do think Fish, Wildlife & Parks has an empire-building problem. I do think they have a problem with maintenance and management of a lot of the land that they already own—so I’m not inclined to vote for more state ownership.”
Read Next: Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks Votes to Approve Controversial Pheasant Stocking Program
Knudson’s opposition was echoed by representatives of the Rocky Mountain Stock Growers Association, who said that the wildlife agency has mismanaged other properties that it runs as WMAs. Meanwhile, Montana Governor Greg Gianforte, who also sits on the Land Board, voted to approve the acquisition, saying that his support hinged largely on FWP’s willingness to allow regulated cattle grazing on the property. “The state has a vested interest in seeing land co-managed both for conservation and production agriculture,” he said. “Because at the point production agriculture leaves the landscape, it has a negative effect on our local communities.”
With the Land Board’s approval of the Big Snowy Mountains WMA now finalized, hunters can expect to obtain access to the property in time for the 2023 fall hunting season. The area will remain closed from December 1 to May 15 each year to provide refuge for wintering wildlife.
 


westwolfone

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 23, 2015
Posts
1,811
Likes
52
Points
248
Field and Stream
Field and Stream
FollowView Profile

Montana Land Board Approves Purchase of Thousands of Acres of Prime Deer and Elk Habitat​

Travis Hall - 4h ago
React14 Comments|


1667350148257.png

A recent vote by the Montana Department of Natural Resources & Conservation Land Board will set aside 5,700 acres of state-managed public land in the Big Sky State. The new public land will provide access to an additional 100,000 acres owned by both the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the United States Forest Service (USFS). The land sits in the central part of Montana at the base of the Big Snowy Mountains. It is being sold to the state for $8.2 million by a local children’s hospital.
The state acquired the land for $8.2 million
The state acquired the land for $8.2 million© John Morrison via Getty

With the October 17 vote to approve the purchase of the soon-to-be Big Snowy Mountain Wildlife Management Area (WMA), the Land Board concluded a three-year effort to allow the state to acquire the property. The purchase was met with widespread support from several conservation groups including Backcountry Hunters & Anglers, the Montana Wildlife Federation, and the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.
The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (RMEF) worked behind the scenes to facilitate the project and has pledged a $250,000 grant to help with startup infrastructure and management of the property. “Elk management benefits come with this project,” RMEF Senior Lands Program Manager Mike Mueller told the Helena Independent Record. “Fish, Wildlife & Parks reports population objectives are over 900 percent above objective there, and a contributing factor is a lack of public access. So this is a public access project.”

The property will provide access to the BLM’s 6,936-acre Twin Coulee Wilderness Study Area along with the USFS’s 88,196-acre Big Snowy Wilderness Study Area. Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks will pull 75 percent of the purchase funds for the Big Snowy WMA from federal Federal Pittman-Roberston dollars, while the remaining 25 percent will come from state-managed coffers funded by hunting license sales. In late August, the FWP Fish and Game Commission voted unanimously to approve the Big Snowies acquisition. During that meeting, FWP Lands Program Manager Bill Schenk said the newly-acquired property will preserve valuable wintering grounds for elk, whitetail deer, mule deer, antelope, and black bear. According to FWP, the area also hosts many non-game species as well, including 22 “species of concern.”
The Montana Land Board vote came with only one abstention, which was cast by board member and Montana Attorney General Alex Knudsen. “I don’t think it’s a surprise to anyone in here, given my previous comments, that I’m not going to vote for this. I’m opposed to this. I’ve made that clear to anyone that’s come to talk to me about this,” Knudsen said. “I do think Fish, Wildlife & Parks has an empire-building problem. I do think they have a problem with maintenance and management of a lot of the land that they already own—so I’m not inclined to vote for more state ownership.”
Read Next: Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks Votes to Approve Controversial Pheasant Stocking Program
Knudson’s opposition was echoed by representatives of the Rocky Mountain Stock Growers Association, who said that the wildlife agency has mismanaged other properties that it runs as WMAs. Meanwhile, Montana Governor Greg Gianforte, who also sits on the Land Board, voted to approve the acquisition, saying that his support hinged largely on FWP’s willingness to allow regulated cattle grazing on the property. “The state has a vested interest in seeing land co-managed both for conservation and production agriculture,” he said. “Because at the point production agriculture leaves the landscape, it has a negative effect on our local communities.”
With the Land Board’s approval of the Big Snowy Mountains WMA now finalized, hunters can expect to obtain access to the property in time for the 2023 fall hunting season. The area will remain closed from December 1 to May 15 each year to provide refuge for wintering wildlife.
 

westwolfone

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 23, 2015
Posts
1,811
Likes
52
Points
248
Sounds good. I grew up out there, and one of my earliest (best) memories is going to herd up cattle that had been grazing on forest service land all summer.

There were always a few, we called them slow elk, that had been shot by out out of state hunters and some were never found (probably ate by predators), but for the most part they survived. Cattle are a lot tougher then people think.
 

westwolfone

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 23, 2015
Posts
1,811
Likes
52
Points
248
First time I ever rode a horse was helping my dad, grandpa, and uncles push the herd into Belle Fourche. Shit, I was young then, got my ass chewed several times along the way. Couple hundred miles because we didn't have the money to trailer, had to herd them as we were dirt poor. Now, in this era you can't do such a thing, sad really.

-Brek
Yep, horses proved their worth in the mountains.
 

rapala_09

Honored Member
Joined
May 10, 2017
Posts
217
Likes
23
Points
110
Location
Beulah, ND
Sounds good. I grew up out there, and one of my earliest (best) memories is going to herd up cattle that had been grazing on forest service land all summer.

There were always a few, we called them slow elk, that had been shot by out out of state hunters and some were never found (probably ate by predators), but for the most part they survived. Cattle are a lot tougher then people think.
Not to start any beef, but how on earth would you know if they were shot by out of state hunters or local hunters?
 


Allen

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 24, 2015
Posts
10,515
Likes
1,539
Points
638
Location
Lincoln, kinda...
First time I ever rode a horse was helping my dad, grandpa, and uncles push the herd into Belle Fourche. Shit, I was young then, got my ass chewed several times along the way. Couple hundred miles because we didn't have the money to trailer, had to herd them as we were dirt poor. Now, in this era you can't do such a thing, sad really.

-Brek

You learned how to ride a horse on a 200 mile cattle drive to Belle Fourche? Did you guys get lost a few times?
 


ndbwhunter

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Jul 15, 2015
Posts
1,286
Likes
16
Points
191
They could just change their land access laws to provide access to WAY MORE public land... Public land should NEVER be allowed to become access locked by private land IMO

The property in question was never landlocked. This acquisition is just opening up more opportunities for direct access to the land. There were other access points in other areas, but very few on the SE side of the range.
 

Recent Posts

Friends of NDA

Top Posters of the Month

  • This month: 190
  • This month: 153
  • This month: 142
  • This month: 137
  • This month: 113
  • This month: 93
  • This month: 93
  • This month: 88
  • This month: 84
  • This month: 78
Top Bottom