Indiana outdoors: Deer hunting ammo change up for debate
DNR will discuss proposals during Tuesday meeting
BY BILL SCIFRES
[email protected]
Not that it will make any appreciable difference, but officially the dialogue is starting to allow rifles with pistol ammunition for deer hunting.
But before starting any discussion about deer hunting - especially with rifles - please allow me (and the Department of Natural Resources) to explain that this will be done (if, indeed, it comes to pass) with short-range ammunition. There will be no long-range ammo involved, which the DNR has been conisistently opposed for many years.
Ammo will be strictly limited, and will shoot accurately over shorter distances - much similar to muzzle-loading weapons - but they will not be accurate at longer ranges.
Insiders say those who have such weapons have agitated the DNR for several years on the matter. Others say the proposed regulation is not expected to make a difference in either the deer harvest or the safety factor.
Along that line, should the rule be adopted, officials of the DNR will be very cognizant of hunting accidents the year rifles are allowed, should it happen. The change in hunting rules that allows short-range rifles would not be legal until next year at the earliest.
The changes of regulations will be heard at 1 p.m. Tuesday during the regularly-scheduled July meeting of the Natural Resources Commission at the Atterbury State Fish and Wildlife Area. Should the various items of the package be approved, the DNR will stage a public meeting or a series of meetings on the package.
The package includes 22 chages in regulations, none so important as the rifle regulation on deer hunting.
The change in the rifle regulation on deer hunting has been opposed by the DNR for many years as a matter of safety. The DNR says it is bringing the rifle issue forward at this time to receive comment of the public before the proposed fall meetings
Meetings of the DNR in recent years have been notoriously underattended.
In other matters, the regulation package includes a rule that will make it more legal for youth having a lifetime license to participate in the bow hunt for deer and eliminate the need for those taking part in the free youth deer hunt to sign up for the HIP program.
The proposed regulations also would:
[*]Remove the 12- to 15-inch slot size limit on bass at Delaney Park Lake. The size limit there would be 14 inches.
[*]Make the size minimum on bass 18 inches with a daily bag limit two fish at Murphey Lake at Willow Slough in Newton County.
[*]Establish a 25-fish limit of bluegill, redear, crappie at Murphey Lake.
[*]Cancel the no-harvest rule on bass at Dove Hollow Lake at Glendale Area. It has been unsuccessful Limit on bass there revert to 14 inches.
[*]Establish a 12-15 slot-size limit on bass on the southern Blue River in Crawford, Harrison and Washington counties. The regulation would stipulate that no more than two of a limit bag (five) bass could be more than 15 inches.
[*]Establish a 20-inch mimimum and one-fish daily limit on the northwestern Sugar Creek through its entire length (Parke, Montgomery, Boone, Clinton and Tipton counties).
There are several other regulation changes are available at:
www.in.gov/nrc/minutes/ current_agenda/ or by calling 1-317-233-6527.