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November Wildlife Board Meeting HighlightsState Wildlife Board adds extra days to two major Utah elk hunts.
At their Nov. 29 meeting in Salt Lake City, members of the Utah Wildlife Board returned the state's general rifle spike bull elk hunt to a 13-day hunt. They also added five days to Utah's limited entry archery bull elk hunt. One change the board did not approve was adding four days to the general rifle buck deer hunt in the Southeastern and Southern regions. The hunts in the two regions will still be five-day hunts this fall. All of the rules the board members approved will be available in Utah's 2008 Big Game Guidebook. The guidebook should be available at the Division of Wildlife Resources' Web site by mid-December. More time to hunt spike elk You'll have more time to hunt spike bull elk after board members returned Utah's general spike bull elk rifle hunt to a 13-day season. It's been nine days long for the past few years. The general spike bull elk rifle hunt will run Oct. 4 to 16. Those are the same season dates Utah's any bull elk rifle hunt will run. "The length of the spike bull elk hunt was shortened a few years ago when the age objective for bulls taken on limited entry units was lowered on most of the units," Aoude says. "Lowering the objective allows more permits to be issued and more bulls to be taken. The idea behind shortening the season was to save more spike bulls so they could grow into mature bulls." Since that time, Aoude says the age objective on most of the elk units has been raised. Raising the objective means fewer bulls will be taken. Even if there was a need to protect spike bulls, Aoude says keeping the season at nine days wouldn't make much of a difference. "The elk situation is the same as the deer situation," he says. "Even though the season has been lengthened by four days, most hunters won't take advantage of the extra days." Aoude says hunters who hunt nine-day elk seasons in Utah hunt an average of five days. That number increases to five-and-a-half days when the season is 13 days long. More days for limited entry archery elk hunters Utah's general archery elk hunt will start five days earlier this summer. The early start will provide limited entry bull elk hunters with five extra days of hunting. Here's what the board approved:
The Utah Bowman's Association recommended the change. For more information about Utah's 2008 big game hunts, call the nearest Division of Wildlife Resources office or the DWR's Salt Lake City office at (801) 538-4700.
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