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More Oregonians picking up deer rifles

06:00 AM PDT on Saturday, October 4, 2008

Associated Press

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -- The woods will turn orange all of a sudden on Saturday as Oregon hunters take up their rifles and take to the woods in search of deer.

It appears that after a generation of declining numbers, the number of deer hunters in Oregon is on the way up.

The number of deer hunters declined for 25 years, from 317,473 in 1981 to 171,680 in 2005.

Sean Christensen/KTVB.COM

In 2007, hunter numbers had rebounded by about 10 percent, to 188,870.

Elk hunting activity was also up, for the third year in a row.

It's estimated deer hunters spend a million days each fall in search of game.

Their chances of bagging a deer this year will be about the same as those in 2007, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife says.

Last year, the weather was favorable, the Fall Hunting Forecast says, and 36 percent of the hunters who drew Eastern Oregon mule deer tags got their venison, while 21 percent of those who participated in black-tailed deer hunts on the west side filled tags.

In the winter, biologists worried that heavy snows in some areas would hurt deer and elk herds. But spring counts indicated otherwise.

"Generally, herds fared the winter well," the report says. And "a late, wet spring provided meant good growing conditions and lots of food through early summer."

The opening of the rifle deer season is followed by a flurry of other general season hunts that begin over the next two months.

Those include upland game bird and waterfowl seasons as well as five different elk hunts two in Eastern Oregon, two in Western Oregon and one along the spine of the Cascade Range.

Last year, the success rates among elk hunters averaged 16 percent statewide last fall, with 18 percent of tag holders in the limited-entry Rocky Mountain Elk areas of Eastern Oregon getting their elk, compared with 12 percent success posted by Roosevelt elk hunters.

The Hunting Forecast's "top tip" for elk hunters is "get off your ATV and get off the roads -- elk in particular will stay away from them."