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Yeah but having a phone and service for when you kinda go off trail working your way to water and it starts getting dark and you can just pull out your phone and retrace your steps back….. in addition to leaving foot/stick/dirt/sand markers (always) It can get dark on you so fast out in the wild woods …..Think a lot of people don’t realize that. Plus compass.![]()

Yeah, it's the whole "comes out of a printer on a long roll" part that's meaningful. It'd be too big of an asspain to individually waterproof 18-24" strips by hand.Go to REI and get waterproof map solution and make your own


I get a yearly non-resident Florida saltwater license. I used to get it in-person when I visited, but I have used both the FWC's website and app. I get a renewal reminder and if so desired, I get my licensed renewed each year automatically. For novelty reasons, I have also bought a hard card. So there are three options, I can print out a paper copy, use the app, or use the hard card. I will probably not get a hard card in the future as they doubled the price this year.
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Steelhead season is the reason. Winter steelhead season, in terms of harvest, begins in December (but can include November as well) of one calendar year and ends in March (or April) of the next calendar year. Having the fishing licensing year begin April 1 and go to March 31 does a better job of capturing the full season's data. This mattered back when 50:50 treaty - non-treaty harvest sharing was still a thing. After Boldt, it took WDG an extra full year to provide the tribes with the non-treaty steelhead catch data, whereas the treaty tribes were using the state's commercial catch daily reporting mechanism. That has become sort of irrelevant now that the tribes report their catch data whenever they want, if they want to. And since there is no non-treaty harvest of wild steelhead any longer, and the harvest of hatchery winter steelhead is down to a trickle, the original reasoning for switching to the April to March catch reporting and licensing year is superfluous.I’ve can’t recall the reason why Washington came up with a 3/31 expiration date. Anyone know?
Steelhead season is the reason. Winter steelhead season, in terms of harvest, begins in December (but can include November as well) of one calendar year and ends in March (or April) of the next calendar year. Having the fishing licensing year begin April 1 and go to March 31 does a better job of capturing the full season's data. This mattered back when 50:50 treaty - non-treaty harvest sharing was still a thing. After Boldt, it took WDG an extra full year to provide the tribes with the non-treaty steelhead catch data, whereas the treaty tribes were using the state's commercial catch daily reporting mechanism. That has become sort of irrelevant now that the tribes report their catch data whenever they want, if they want to. And since there is no non-treaty harvest of wild steelhead any longer, and the harvest of hatchery winter steelhead is down to a trickle, the original reasoning for switching to the April to March catch reporting and licensing year is superfluous.
They absolutely do, but most of that sort of tax revenue goes to fund the programs at current levels; not innovations or improvements. All states do that.You say this like Washington doesn't collect epic levels of tax revenue from other streams.
Great information (that I didn't know). Maybe it's a chicken vs. egg thing, but WDFW's lowland lake season, which starts in April, is their biggest license purchase motivator these days. That also makes April an ideal month for renewal from a management perspective.Steelhead season is the reason. Winter steelhead season, in terms of harvest, begins in December (but can include November as well) of one calendar year and ends in March (or April) of the next calendar year. Having the fishing licensing year begin April 1 and go to March 31 does a better job of capturing the full season's data. This mattered back when 50:50 treaty - non-treaty harvest sharing was still a thing. After Boldt, it took WDG an extra full year to provide the tribes with the non-treaty steelhead catch data, whereas the treaty tribes were using the state's commercial catch daily reporting mechanism. That has become sort of irrelevant now that the tribes report their catch data whenever they want, if they want to. And since there is no non-treaty harvest of wild steelhead any longer, and the harvest of hatchery winter steelhead is down to a trickle, the original reasoning for switching to the April to March catch reporting and licensing year is superfluous.
38% over 15 years isn't a whole lot considering the cumulative rate of inflation since 2011 is about 42%.The cost of a hunting or fishing license in Washington may increase 38% soon. Democratic legislators have voted to advance Senate Bill 5583, which raises the cost of these licenses for the first time since 2011, according to The Center Square.
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Hunting and fishing licenses in the state may be going up significantly - MyNorthwest.com
The cost of a hunting or fishing license in Washington may increase significantly soon.mynorthwest.com
What I’d like to see is charging non-residents much more than they currently are. I think the only concern I have about substantially increasing the cost for residents is that they consider the effect on the number of people fishing without a license.The cost of a hunting or fishing license in Washington may increase 38% soon. Democratic legislators have voted to advance Senate Bill 5583, which raises the cost of these licenses for the first time since 2011, according to The Center Square.
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Hunting and fishing licenses in the state may be going up significantly - MyNorthwest.com
The cost of a hunting or fishing license in Washington may increase significantly soon.mynorthwest.com
Maybe a little off topic but IMO this is where high tourism, low population states like Montana that don't have a sales tax are screwing up.I enjoy visiting states with little or no sales tax.
Used to be, I had no problem with periodic fee increases to keep up with inflation, but I'm no fan of this proposal. Since WDFW began throwing recreational fishing under the bus about 6 or 7 years ago now, I'm in the grumpy "defund WDFW" mode. I'd like to see their budget tightened, because that's really the only message the department understands, until they start acting like they understand that continually biting the very hand that feeds them is really bad policy and that they would be far better off providing positive service to primary constituents. They do understand money, and giving them more of it for doing the wrong thing sends exactly the wrong message.The cost of a hunting or fishing license in Washington may increase 38% soon. Democratic legislators have voted to advance Senate Bill 5583, which raises the cost of these licenses for the first time since 2011, according to The Center Square.
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Hunting and fishing licenses in the state may be going up significantly - MyNorthwest.com
The cost of a hunting or fishing license in Washington may increase significantly soon.mynorthwest.com