Vermont Allocates 13 Moose Hunting Permits for 2018
MONTPELIER,
Vt. – The Vermont Fish & Wildlife Board voted on April 25 to have 13 moose
hunting permits awarded this year. By law, five permits will be available
to Vermont military veterans and up to three permits will be available for
“Special Opportunity” recipients with life-threatening illnesses; the remaining
five permits will be auctioned in accordance with regulations.
The hunt
will be restricted to bull moose in Wildlife Management Units E1 and E2 in the
northeastern corner of the state where the Fish & Wildlife Department
recommends the moose population be maintained at its current level to reduce
the effects of winter ticks. The department expects only nine to ten
moose to be taken. The small number of bulls-only permits is not expected
to have any impact on Vermont’s moose population.
No regular
public lottery will be held. People who have moose hunting bonus points
from previous years will have those points “frozen” so that they may be used in
future years.
The
special priority drawing for five permits for Vermont military veterans will
occur on August 1. Veterans may apply at no cost starting on April 30 on
Fish & Wildlife’s website (www.vtfishandwildlife.com)
or by mailing downloaded applications. The deadline to apply is July
6. Veteran permit recipients may hunt only in the October 20-25
season. Veterans who have bonus points from previous years must apply in
the veteran lottery this year in order to preserve their veteran bonus
points. Those who would like to request a paper application or need assistance
applying may call the department’s licensing office at 802-828-1190.
Three
moose permits will also be available to “Special Opportunity” recipients –
people who have life-threatening illnesses and who are sponsored by a qualified
charitable organization. These permit recipients may only hunt in the
October 20-25 season. Applications are at no cost and can be received from the
department’s licensing office.
Hunters also will have the option to
bid on five moose hunting permits in an auction to be announced later.
Proceeds from the auction help fund the department’s conservation education
programs. Auction permit recipients may choose to hunt in either the
October 1-7 archery season or the October 20-25 season.
Vermont’s
moose project leader, wildlife biologist Cedric Alexander estimates Vermont has
1,650 moose statewide with the greatest concentration in the Northeast Kingdom.
“We are
limiting the hunt to the portion of the state where the moose population is
stabilizing, and we believe it is in the best interest of moose to keep their
density at its current level of one moose per square mile,” said
Alexander. By maintaining moose at this level, research indicates winter
ticks will have fewer hosts to feed on. For the remainder of the state, a
no-harvest approach is designed to increase the population.”