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Michigan To Allow Baiting in 2011 Deer Season

By Hunting NetworkJune 9, 2011

LAST UPDATED: May 1st, 2015

Deer hunters in the state of Michigan (at least the lower part) have got some new added tactics to think about this season. It seems the Natural Resources Commission has voted in favor of legalizing deer baiting once more. Will this ruin the “wolverine states” deer hunting?

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Michigan’s wildlife policymakers on Thursday voted to end a ban on baiting and feeding of whitetail deer in most of the state’s Lower Peninsula.

The 4-3 vote by the Natural Resources Commission means baiting will be legal again in most of the Lower Peninsula from Oct. 1 to Jan. 1. The exception is a northeast section where bovine tuberculosis remains a problem, including Alcona, Alpena, Iosco, Montmorency, Oscoda, and Presque Isle counties.

corn pile

Michigan’s NEW baiting laws include that an amount of bait can not exceed 2 gallons at any one hunting site.

Bait could be “scattered” but not “piled” and the amount of bait could not exceed two gallons at any one hunting site.

The debate isn’t over, however. The commission also voted to revisit the ban in three years, if not earlier. Baiting and feeding have been banned in the Lower Peninsula since August 2008, when a deer with chronic wasting disease was found at a captive breeding farm in Kent County.

No other cases have been reported. That led some to push for ending the ban, which was instituted to prevent deer from spreading diseases to each other while eating highly concentrated piles of food left by hunters and others.

The new plan also would allow people to feed deer for recreational viewing year-round except in the bovine TB zone.
Policies that allow limited baiting and feeding in the Upper Peninsula remain in place.

Hunters have long been divided over baiting. Some advocate it in part because they say it increases their chances of a successful hunt. Others consider baiting to be unethical and say it has encouraged deer to feed at night, when they cannot be hunted.

Some commissioners noted Thursday that the ban has been difficult to enforce.

“This is a very controversial and emotional issue,” said John Madigan, a Natural Resources Commission member who voted in favor of lifting the ban.

We, at the Hunting Network, know how controversial the practice of baiting deer can be. At times it’s gone so far as to split our office into two (for lunch break anyway). What we want to know is what side do you Michigander’s take? Are you for or against the lift on baiting, and will it change your tactics this fall?

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