Tuesday, September 22, 2015

FWC’s Hunting Hot Sheet

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
(Having trouble viewing this email? View it as a Web page.)
FWC’s Hunting Hot Sheet
Your source for the information and resources needed to take part in Florida’s hunting seasons

What every deer hunter should know about the new regs
The 2015/2016 deer season ushers in new deer hunting regulations that will allow management on a more local scale so efforts are tailored to habitat quality, characteristics of the local deer herd and preferences of local hunters and other stakeholders. 
To accomplish that goal, deer management units (DMUs) have been established throughout the state, each with its own set of antler regulations and antlerless deer harvest days. The new antler regulations will protect most 1.5-year-old bucks, while allowing hunters to harvest bucks that are 2.5 years old and older, a goal hunters supported in recent surveys. 
The new antler regulations apply to hunters 16 and older hunting all Florida lands — private property, public land and wildlife management areas. To encourage youth participation in hunting, a special exemption was included. Youth hunters (15 years old and younger) in all DMUs are exempt from these greater antler regulations and may continue to harvest antlered deer with at least a 5-inch antler. 
Among these changes, antlerless deer seasons during general gun season on private lands have been modified for each DMU based on hunter-supported deer population goals. The new antlerless deer days reflect input from farmers, landowners and hunters, and, just like before, are only on private property and do not apply to wildlife management areas. 
For more information about antler regulations and antlerless deer harvest days, please see the following resources:
 Update on new deer hunting regulations video
 Stay legal with these hunting tips for Florida’s bow seasons

 Antler Requirements and Antlerless Deer Seasons by Deer Management Unit

 Essential information for bear hunting in Florida
Florida will be having its first bear hunt in two decades. The black bear is a conservation success story in the Sunshine State, and because of the species’ population growth, hunting will be used as one part of the FWC’s overall approach in stabilizing expanding bear populations within certain areas of the state.
The season, which opens Saturday, Oct. 24, will take place in four of Florida’s seven bear management units (BMUs) – the East Panhandle, North, Central and South.
 License and permit requirements
To hunt bears, you must have a hunting license (unless exempt) and a bear permit.  Permits cost $100 for residents and $300 for nonresidents. Everyone wishing to hunt bears is required to have a bear permit – even youth, seniors and people with disabilities. The only people who aren’t required to pay for the permit are those who bought a lifetime hunting license before July 1998. But they still must obtain the permit if they want to hunt bears.
If you will be hunting bears on a WMA that allows bear hunting, besides a hunting license and bear permit, you’ll also need (unless exempt) a $26 management area permit; and if it’s during archery season, you’ll need a $5 archery permit; during muzzleloader season, a $5 muzzleloading gun permit. And if the bear hunt is during a quota hunt period, you’ll also be required to have that quota permit.
Hunt dates and harvest objective info
Everyone with a bear permit has the opportunity to bear hunt the first two days of the season –Oct. 24-25.  But, if a BMU reaches its harvest objective, that BMU will be closed to bear hunting for the rest of the season.  Beginning Sunday, Oct. 25 after 9 p.m. Eastern time, hunters will need to check with the FWC to learn about any possible BMU closures by:
  •  Calling 844-FWC-BEAR
  •  Going online to MyFWC.com/Hunting
  •  Following us at Facebook.com/HGM/FWC and Twitter.com/HuntFloridaFWC
Until the harvest objective is met in a particular BMU, the hunt will continue through Oct. 30 in that BMU. 
 2015 Guide to Bear Hunting in Florida

 Helpful Videos About Florida’s Bear Hunt
 Florida’s Bear Hunting Hub

 Waterfowl Hunting in Florida
Some waterfowl hunting opportunities are already underway in Florida this fall with the opening of the September teal and wood duck season on Sept. 19. Florida has been given another special opportunity to get a little extra duck hunting in September. After the regular five-day wood duck and teal season (Sept. 19-23), hunters will be allowed four more days of teal-only hunting beginning on Sept. 24. As of now, though, the season is considered experimental. The future of this opportunity depends on making sure hunters are harvesting ONLY teal during those four extra days.
Short video on how to identify wood ducks from blue-winged teal and green-winged teal

Waterfowl and other migratory game bird regulations
Find boat ramps

Find a place to hunt, fish and more
Did you know the FWC is the landowner or lead managing agency responsible for land stewardship on 1.4 million acres across the state? The FWC is tasked with providing quality wildlife conservation and recreation opportunities including hunting, fishing and more. To hunt on thesewildlife management areas (WMAs), you need a management area permit and a hunting license (and often other permits depending on species and season), unless exempt. Many of these areas require limited entry/quota permits that must be applied for during scheduled application periods.
Learn more about WMA hunting opportunities as well as download WMA maps and regulations brochures
Hunting hyperlinks to the information and resources you need this fall
Bookmark this easy guide to Florida’s hunting season dates and bag limits
Get more hunting regulation details in this summary of the Florida 2015/2016 Hunting Regulations
Looking for a place to sight in your rifle, enjoy a round of sporting clays or fine-tune your bow shooting? Check out FWC’s Florida shooting ranges, which are located throughout the state
If you plan to hunt out of state this year and need your hunter safety card but can't find it, we've got you covered. Visit this link to search for your duplicate Florida hunter safety card
Be the first to know! Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.
Questions?
Tammy Sapp – tammy.sapp@myfwc.com
Tony Young – tony.young@myfwc.com
Ask FWC 



http://live.oysterradio.com/

No comments:

Post a Comment