WINDSOR — Hunters, landowners and anyone else interested in deer and moose can attend a Vermont Fish & Wildlife public hearing set to take place on March 21 in Windsor.
The hearing, one of several in the state in March through May, will include results of Vermont’s 2017 deer and moose seasons and prospects for hunting next fall as well as an opportunity for people to provide their observations and opinions regarding deer and moose.
On Feb. 21, the Fish & Wildlife Board preliminarily approved issuing moose permits for the 2018 season. The Fish & Wildlife Department’s big game team recommended that only 14 permits for bull moose be issued for the October hunting seasons. The permits would be for WMUs E1 and E2 in the Northeast Kingdom, where moose numbers are close to biologists’ density goals.
The number of moose hunting permits was reduced from 80 in 2017 and 141 in 2016 to allow growth of the moose population, all according to the F&WD.
“We propose to limit the harvest of moose to that region of the state where we want to maintain moose densities at current levels in order to reduce the effects of winter ticks,” said moose biologist Cedric Alexander. “Throughout the rest of the state, we recommend suspending the harvest of moose until populations increase closer to their goals.”
Locally, a hearing is scheduled from 6:30 to 9:00 p.m. Wednesday, March 21 at the Windsor Welcome Center, 3 Railroad Ave.
The hearings will also include a review of the proposed 2018 moose hunting season and an opportunity for the public to comment.
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