Connect with us

Montana

General hunting season ends with increased success in western regions, mixed results in east • Daily Montanan

Published

on

General hunting season ends with increased success in western regions, mixed results in east • Daily Montanan


Following the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, Montana’s 2024 general big game hunting season came to an end on Dec. 1. Hunters across the state had mixed results, with hunters in Montana’s western regions seeing increased harvests compared to 2023, while hunters in many of the eastern regions reported mixed or decreased harvest numbers.

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks biologists rely on hunter check stations to collect data on hunter participation and success — though these check stations only capture a snapshot of the overall hunting data as check stations are only manned on weekends in specific areas. However, because many stations have been operated consistently over the years, they provide important harvest trend data. Biologists will also collect information through hunter harvest phone surveys.

“Thank you to all the hunters who stopped and shared information with us season-long,” Lee Tafelmeyer, FWP wildlife biologist in charge of the Bonner station said in a statement. “Hunter harvest information and observations are important input for FWP.”

Here is a roundup of how hunters fared across the state.

Advertisement

Region 1

In the northwest portion of the state more than 10,800 hunters stopped at check stations and roughly 10% of them made successful harvests, up a percentage point from last year.

Hunters bagged 954 white-tailed deer, including 745 bucks, according to counts at the four regional check stations. That was up by nearly 200 deer, and 200 bucks, compared to 2023’s harvest data.

The mule deer harvest across the northwest was down slightly from last year — 92 compared to 97 — but hunters harvested 11 more elk this season.

Cumulative harvest data from Montana’s northwest Region 1

Region 2

Advertisement

In the state’s west-central region, which comprises the Bitterroot and the I-90 corridor from the Idaho border toward Anaconda, hunters also saw increased success from last year. Over the six weekends of the general hunting season, 9,905 hunters stopped at the region’s check stations and reported a harvest of 288 elk, 119 mule deer and 525 white-tailed deer.

The overall number of hunter stops was down slightly, but harvest number across all three species were higher at nearly all check stations.

Region 3

Across seven hunter check stations operating on intermittent weekends in southwestern Montana, FWP officials met with 6,966 hunters. Hunters reported harvesting 406 elk, including 199 antlered animals. The majority of elk were reported at the Cameron/Ennis check station, where hunter success rates averaged around 9%.

Hunters also reported taking 168 mule deer and 48 white-tailed deer across the region.

The Alder check station saw the highest reported hunter success rate in the region. On closing weekend, 21% of the 208 hunters who passed by the check station reported successful hunts. Hunters also had a 19% harvest rate during the third weekend of the season.

Advertisement

Region 4

Data from Region 4, comprising the north-central part of the state, was not available by Friday afternoon. This piece will be updated.

Mule deer (Provided by Montana FWP)

Region 5

The final hunting weekend for south-central Montana had mild, sunny weather but depressed success rates for hunters. According to an FWP news release, three of the four check stations recorded some of the lowest harvest rates on record for closing weekend and the cumulative mule deer harvest was a record low at three stations.

A total of 4,400 hunters visited the region’s check stations throughout the season and reported 451 total harvested mule deer, 398 white-tailed deer, 271 elk and 54 antelope. The general antelope season closed Nov. 10.

Region 6

Advertisement

The Havre check station reported the lowest number of hunters seen since 2015, when antlerless mule deer licenses were not available or greatly reduced throughout the state. Just 1,657 hunters passed through the check station this year, down 18% from 2023 and 7% below the long-term average.

Harvest rates were also lower for most species throughout the season.

Hunters reported 150 antelope — the antelope season closed on Nov. 10 — down 15% from 2023, but a whopping 39% below the long-term average. Mule deer harvest numbers were also down 31% from last year and 32% below the long-term averages. Mule deer doe harvest was down the most, at just 40% of average.

White-tailed deer numbers were also depressed, with just 118 harvested, 21% below last year.

The region also saw the lowest elk harvest number in two decades, with only 19 elk checked.

Advertisement
Havre Check Station Harvest data from 2001-2024. Data and graphic by Montana FWP

Region 7

A colder-than-normal closing weekend in southeast Montana brought down hunter traffic at game check stations in Hysham, Ashland and Glendive.

Final weekend tallies showed the Hysham station reported near average hunter numbers, but harvest success rates were about 26% below normal for closing weekend.

Glendive also saw less action than normal on closing weekend, with just 21 hunters passing by the check station, down 30% from normal.

Comparatively, hunters passing through Ashland saw increased harvest rates with a reported seven elk, 11 mule deer and 15 white-tailed deer.

Muzzleloader heritage season offers upcoming hunting opportunities

While the general rifle season closed on Dec. 1, hunters will have some wintertime hunting opportunities, such as the upcoming muzzleloader season which runs from Dec. 14-22. . Find out more: fwp.mt.gov/hunt.

Advertisement
  • During the muzzleloader heritage season, a person may take a deer or elk with any unused license or permit that is valid on the last day of the general hunting season (i.e., Dec. 1, 2024).
  • Hunters can use plain lead projectiles and a muzzleloading rifle that is charged with loose black powder, loose pyrodex, or an equivalent loose black powder substitute and ignited by a flintlock, wheel lock, matchlock or percussion mechanism using a percussion or musket cap.
  • The muzzleloading rifle must be a minimum of .45 caliber and may not have more than two barrels.
  • During the Muzzleloader Heritage season, hunters may not use a muzzleloading rifle that requires insertion of a cap or primer into the open breech of the barrel (inline), is capable of being loaded from the breech, or is mounted with an optical magnification device.
  • Use of pre-prepared paper or metallic cartridges, sabots, gas checks or other similar power and range-enhancing manufactured loads that enclose the projectile from the rifling or bore of the firearm is also prohibited.
  • Many of Montana’s Wildlife Management Areas have seasonal closures from Dec. 2 through May 14. Before heading to the field, hunters should review the regulations for each hunting district they plan to hunt. A list of WMAs and seasonal closure dates are available online at https://fwp.mt.gov/conservation/wildlife-management-areas

Montana hunters can also thank landowners for access and share stories of their season through an online portal. FWP will collect these expressions of gratitude and share them with the specific landowners at the end of the season. Notes can be submitted online at www.surveymonkey.com/r/thank-a-landowner-2024.



Source link

Montana

At Largest ICE Detention Camp, Staff Bet on Detainee Suicides, AP Reports

Published

on

At Largest ICE Detention Camp, Staff Bet on Detainee Suicides, AP Reports


A sign marks the entrance to a series of hardened tents at the Camp East Montana immigrant detention center in the desert at a U.S. Army base on the outskirts of El Paso, Texas, Friday, Feb. 13, 2026. Morgan Lee/AP

Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily.

This story contains discussion of suicide. If you or someone you care about may be at risk of suicide, contact the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988, or go to 988lifeline.org.

Staff at the nation’s largest Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility have placed bets on which detainee will be the next to die by suicide, according to new reporting from the Associated Press based on 911 calls and detainee accounts. 

Owen Ramsingh, a legal permanent resident who spent several weeks at the Camp East Montana detention facility in Texas, told AP that he overheard a security guard talking about a betting pool for which detainee would next die by suicide. The guard said he had paid $500 into the pot, which would all go to the winner with the most accurate predictions on detainees harming themselves. 

Advertisement

Without providing details, the Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told AP that Ramsingh, who was brought to the US at age 5 from the Netherlands, was lying about the suicide bets. 

In January, staff at Camp East Montana called 911 to request emergency help for Geraldo Lunas Campos, a 55-year-old from Cuba. DHS described his death as an attempted suicide. A medical examiner later ruled it a homicide. That same month, staff at the detention facility called 911 to report that a 36-year-old Nicaraguan man died by suicide. The AP reports that “detainees attempted to harm themselves while expressing suicidal ideations on at least six other occasions that resulted in 911 calls.”

Once the site of an internment camp for Japanese Americans during World War II, Camp East Montana is made up of six long tents at the Fort Bliss Army base outside of El Paso. On an average day, the facility holds around 3,000 detainees who are living in harsh conditions: They lack sufficient food and often go without proper medical care, according to AP’s review of 130 calls made to 911. Those calls took place in just about five months—from when the tents were quickly constructed in mid-August to January 20.

“Every day felt like a week. Every week felt like a month. Every month felt like a year,”Ramsingh said. He lived in Columbia, Missouri before being stopped at the airport by DHS and sent to Camp East Montana last year. Despite holding a green card and being married to a US citizen, he was deported to the Netherlands in February over a drug conviction from when he was a teenager (which he served prison time for). “Camp East Montana was 1,000% worse than a prison,” Ramsingh added. 

Ramsingh said that the alledged bets on who would die by suicide were especially difficult because he had contemplated suicide himself.

Advertisement

While ICE data shows that the average stay at the tents is around nine days, detainees can be stuck at the camp for months as the courts struggle to accommodate President Donald Trump’s mass detainment and deportation campaign. 

US House Rep. Veronica Escobar, a Democrat who represents part of El Paso and has toured Camp East Montana, told AP that the facility “should not be operational.”

“It feels like this contractor is reinventing the wheel,” she said, “ and people are losing their lives in their experiment.” 



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Montana

Encore of the Heart: Montana Performer Makes Comeback After Heart Attack | AHA

Published

on

Encore of the Heart: Montana Performer Makes Comeback After Heart Attack | AHA


Frankee Angel, a lifelong performer, found her world upended when she suffered a sudden medical emergency just before playing piano at St. Patrick’s Church. Unaware that she had already survived one heart attack, she was shocked to learn she was in the midst of a second. The damage was severe—her heart’s ejection fraction had fallen to 15%, indicating advanced heart failure.

Under the care of the cardiology team at Intermountain Health St. James Hospital, Angel began a long journey toward stabilizing and strengthening her heart. Providers monitored her closely, adjusting medications and helping her manage complications like fluid buildup. Their goal was to prepare her for an implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD), a device that could protect her from dangerous heart rhythms. In July 2025, once her body was ready, the device was successfully implanted.

Angel immediately felt renewed energy and affectionately named the ICD “Minerva,” after her old stage persona. “It’s a miracle! I’m able to live like the person I am meant to be,” she said.

With the support of cardiac rehabilitation and her dedicated care team, Angel gradually reclaimed her identity as a performer. She returned to playing piano during mass and is now preparing for a role in Macbeth. Her story highlights the broader impact of St. James Hospital’s “Hearts in the Mountains” initiative, launched in 2022 to expand heart-failure care in rural Montana—a program that has helped reduce cardiology readmission rates from 30% to 11.4%.

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Montana

Montana State announces spring football schedule; Nolan Askelson joins coaching staff

Published

on

Montana State announces spring football schedule; Nolan Askelson joins coaching staff


BOZEMAN — Montana State will begin spring football practices March 24.

The reigning national champion Bobcats will hold 12 practices, two scrimmages and the Sonny Holland Spring Classic over the course of five weeks. The Sonny Holland Spring Classic is scheduled for Saturday, April 25.

Also on the schedule is the MSU Pro Day, which will be held April 2.

In addition to releasing the spring practice schedule, Montana State confirmed the addition of Nolan Askelson to the coaching staff. Askelson, a Billings Senior High School alum, will be an assistant defensive line coach for Bobby Daly, who is returning as Montana State’s defensive coordinator after spending last season at UTEP.

Advertisement

Askelson was a standout linebacker for the Bobcats, capping his MSU career with first-team All-Big Sky Conference honors in 2023. He played in four games as a true freshman in 2018 before becoming a regular rotation player in 2019. An injury shortened his 2021 season, but he played 11 games in 2022 and finished with 64 tackles.

As a senior in 2023, Askelson wore Montana State’s legacy No. 41 jersey and led the team with 84 tackles, eight tackles-for-loss and two sacks.

In high school, he was a two-time all-state selection for Senior and helped the Broncs win Class AA state championships in 2016 and 2017.

Montana State spring football schedule

Tuesday, March 24 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Advertisement

Thursday, March 26 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Friday, March 27 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Monday, March 30 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Wednesday, April 1 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Thursday, April 2 — Pro Day (no practice)

Advertisement

Friday, April 3 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Saturday, April 4 — Practice, 10:05 a.m.

Tuesday, April 7 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Friday, April 10 — Closed scrimmage, 7 p.m.

Tuesday, April 14 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Advertisement

Thursday, April 16 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Saturday, April 18 — Closed scrimmage, 10:05 a.m.

Tuesday, April 21 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Thursday, April 23 — Practice, 7:05 a.m.

Saturday, April 25 — Sonny Holland Spring Classic, 1 p.m.

Advertisement





Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending