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EVERYONE PLEASE READ!

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Old 03-05-2002 | 08:23 AM
  #61  
 
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From: Chester Md
Default RE: EVERYONE PLEASE READ!

Why I hunt is simple. It strips the layer of urbanization and commercialization from me and lets me re-connect with the Earth, God and my own basic elements.

I step into the woods, my senses keen. I can feel the slightest breeze, smell the faint odor of leaves and dirt or catch a whiff of the rutting buck or doe upwind of me. I'm very aware of where my hands and feet are. I can track a dozen different crunches and pops from different directions.

Well maybe it's not so simple but it sure is basic.

Edited by - big buck brannigan on 03/05/2002 09:26:11
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Old 03-07-2002 | 01:16 AM
  #62  
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"Nocked,cocked & ready to rock"
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Old 03-08-2002 | 12:04 PM
  #63  
Nontypical Buck
 
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From: Rainy Day Texas/USA
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I have posted this article before written by an outdoor writer in the 'Houston Chronicle.' It is a must read. I think everyone here can feel the message in this article. Very nice piece of writing. One of the best that I have come across in terms of "Why do we hunt?" Enjoy.




One hunter's thoughts from a week in the woods
By SHANNON TOMPKINS
Copyright 2001 Houston Chronicle

Wails and warbles and squalls cut through the fog of sleep, and I opened my eyes to a darkness so profound it took a few seconds to recognize I was conscious.

Alone inside the one-room shack, I groped for the little flashlight and checked the wind-up alarm clock -- 3:15 a.m.

I killed the light, slumped back onto the old bed and wiggled under the ancient quilt until reaching some equilibrium between its welcomed warmth and the refreshing chill of the November night.

The coyotes kept at it, their high-pitched calls seeming to come from every direction. One sounded as if it were nearly under the open window beside the bed.

I drifted back to sleep listening to the wild canines' songs, wondering what they were discussing and gratified they woke me to hear their conversation.

Moments such as that -- little episodes that bring comfort, enlightenment and wonder -- make deer hunting such a worthwhile experience.

Contrary to the slanderous stereotype, time spent afield in the professed pursuit of venison is not consumed in a saturnalia of alcohol or bacchanal of blood.

It is, for some of us at least, a ritual of the most serious sort -- a chance to be part of an experience that helps us learn and grow and perhaps become more aware of the world around us and our place in it.

It is not at all unlike going to church.

This past week, the deer lease provided some memorable moments and fresh insights into deer, deer hunting and the reasons most of us go afield.

A handful of them, in no particular order, were:

·A deer's sense of smell is unimaginable when held against our pitifully weak human olfactory ability.

This is no news to most deer hunters; we've all heard the alarm snorts from unseen deer that have "busted" us from 100 yards away using nothing more than their nose.

But an episode this past week reconfirmed deers' ability to sift scents.

An hour after dawn, a sleek doe appeared about 100 yards away in the hardwood bottom where I sat in a tripod stand.

The doe's actions were unusual. She stayed right in that spot, occasionally nosing the ground and poking and rubbing a patch of American beautyberry with her nose.

She'd take a couple of steps, then turn and retrace them.

The doe was atop a scrape, a pawed patch of ground a buck deer uses as a kind of trap line for does in estrus.

After nearly a half-hour, the doe wandered off, taking a random path through the woods.

That afternoon, more than nine hours after the doe's visit, a young buck appeared from nowhere. He walked straight to the scrape, nosed the ground, pawed the earth, rubbed his preorbital glands on the twigs over the scrape then scrunched up and urinated over his hocks, washing the musky scent from his tarsal glands onto the sandy ground.

He then put his nose to the "French mulberry" bush the doe had nudged and brushed.

Through 10x50 binoculars, I watched as he lifted his head, slightly opened his mouth, curled his upper lip and shoved out his tongue.

The buck was literally tasting the scent -- the estrogen and other pheromones -- left by the doe.

He put his nose to the ground and like some pointing dog on the trail of a running quail began tailing the long-gone doe.

The testosterone-charged buck never wavered from her long-cold, trackless path, using nothing but his nose to direct him.

Amazing!

·Deer know what to worry about.

I watched does and yearlings and bucks pay no attention to coyotes yipping in the distance or crows yammering right over their heads.

Deer never flinched at the crack of rifle shots in the distance or paid any mind to the rattle and hum of logging trucks and chainsaws.

But when the faintest sound of human voices drifted into the woods -- whether it was loggers or folks working in the pasture adjacent to our East Texas lease -- deer immediately went into serious survival mode.

Heads and ears popped up and focused on the direction of the faraway voices. They would stare toward the sound, move anxiously, then melt away.

Those wild deer almost certainly never have had a close encounter with a human. How they develop, almost from birth, this awareness that the two-legged creatures are their most serious predator speaks to the honest natural relationship between hunters and their prey.

·The theory that a scrape is the purview of one particular buck is bogus.

Truth is, during the rut several bucks may use a scrape as a check station in their single-minded efforts to locate receptive does and pass their genes to another generation.

How many bucks may visit a single scrape?

Depends on the place and the scrape, of course. But some information gleaned on our typical East Texas lease proved interesting.

A couple of weeks ago, my brother Les set up a "deer cam" -- a point-and-shoot camera housed in a weather-proof housing and using infrared or motion sensors to trip the camera's shutter -- on a tree adjacent to a particularly large scrape he located near one of his tripods.

Over the next few days, the camera recorded 13 individual deer visiting the scrape. Most of them were bucks.

The camera recorded eight different bucks, from a pencil-necked spike to a healthy 10-pointer, using that single scrape.

Some showed at midnight. Others in mid-afternoon. But most of the deer -- bucks and does -- made their stops at the scrape between dawn and mid-morning.

The lesson is that just because a hunter sees a year-and-a-half-old forkhorn working a scrape, it doesn't mean he's the bull of that particular piece of woods. The next visitor to the rutting season signpost could be his grandfather.

It's the kind of knowledge that breeds hope and patience, both of which are crucial to deer hunters.

·There is no doubt the recent explosion in the use of "deer cams" has helped hunters learn more about the animals they pursue and increase their chances of success.

The cameras can unblinkingly monitor a feeder or a trail or a scrape, yielding information on which deer use an area and even patterning their visits.

But does the use of these inanimate "scouts" steal an important part of deer hunting's essence?

No doubt the cameras are fascinating, useful tools. It's exciting to get the film processed and have it reveal the heretofore unknowable. It's thrilling to see a buck you've never seen, or marvel at a photo of a bobcat skulking along a trail.

But does that knowledge make us better hunters or just more efficient deer collectors.

Deer and deer hunting should be magic things, filled with surprise and wonder and the unexpected. And for hunting to be the consecrated, honest ritual it should, it must be an exercise in skill and woodsmanship that shows the hunter to be worthy of taking an animal.

Having a machine chronicle every deer on a tract of land is like running Christmas presents through an X-ray machine before opening them -- the magic and wonder are gone.

When you know too much -- when a human has too much control over the animals or too little of himself invested in the experience -- taking a deer can become the sterile, soulless act of engaging a target.

But how much is too much?

Do deer cams cross that line? How about corn feeders? Food plots? Scoped rifles? High fences? Guided hunts?

The answer is not as important as simply asking the question.

·The best time of the day for a deer hunter is the hour before dawn.

Whether it's spent huddled against a rock overlooking a Hill Country canyon, secluded in a towering box blind at the intersection of two senderos in South Texas, or perched in a wobbly tripod next to a big swamp chestnut oak in an East Texas creek bottom, that hour or so before dawn holds the heart of the hunt.

Waiting in the dark, watching shooting stars, listening to the tremolo of screech owls and warbling coyotes while sipping a warming cup of coffee, a hunter can feel truly a part of a place.

And in that space just before forms begin appearing in what was blackness and the first wheezing call of a thrush confirms the end of another night, the excitement and anticipation builds. Anything is possible. This could be the day. Magic could happen.

That's what deer hunting is. It's about everything leading up to the moment when the trigger is pulled, and the respect shown the animal should the trigger be pulled.

It's not, as most deer hunters understand and most non-hunters can't comprehend, about pulling that trigger.






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Old 03-09-2002 | 06:31 AM
  #64  
Spike
 
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Default RE: EVERYONE PLEASE READ!

I believe you can't make a non hunter understand, for the same reason I ask why do golf, why collect baseball cards, why watch these new stupid TV shows. These are our vises and if you don't care for them you don't get the enjoyment out of them. And no matter how much explaining is done, you won't understand. It is what makes our personalities isn't?
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Old 03-10-2002 | 01:25 PM
  #65  
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I HUNT THERE FOR I AM. Having a deer walk into my stand is the best rush I have ever had. Not just the first time but every time. The thrill of the hunt, the anticipation, and then the moment of truth. A great way to get in touch with nature and yourself. After all, you do not know who you really are until the first time you pull the trigger, and that feeling of satisfation sinks into your entire body and you truly feel that you are one with nature.

*Mark*

Edited by - BUCKMARK on 03/12/2002 04:56:48
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Old 03-11-2002 | 06:59 PM
  #66  
Spike
 
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From: LaSalle Ontario Canada
Default RE: EVERYONE PLEASE READ!

Tazman, what a great writer.
I think hunters all have the same basic feelings as to why they hunt. Being at one with nature, escaping the ratrace that most of us are in, and the adrenaline that flows with the kill. Very satisfying!
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Old 03-12-2002 | 05:21 PM
  #67  
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Default RE: EVERYONE PLEASE READ!

in a magazine I was reading the other day, the author pointed out a fact: as humans, we are either predators or scavengers. If you got to the grocery store to buy your meat, you are a scavenger, if you go and kill your own, you are a predator. I'm a predator.
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Old 03-13-2002 | 10:54 AM
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From: Oil City Pa USA
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Why do I hunt? I hunt because of my love for the outdoors. I spend alot of time outdoors, weather I am hunting, hiking, camping, fishing, whatever, I just love the outdoors. I don't need to kill an animal to have a good day of hunting. I spend more time watching squirrels run around the tree tops, then I ever will shooting at them. I love the feeling of watching a herd of deer wandering around. I love watching a flock of geese coming in toward my blind. Hearing a grouse flush and having it scare you half to death is something you just can't explain. The feeling you get when you take your first deer is a memory you will never forget.
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Old 03-13-2002 | 12:22 PM
  #69  
Nontypical Buck
 
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Here is my reply to a recent newspaper column:

I have lost many hours sleep thinking about the thoughtless way in which hunting has been portrayed. In the bible Genesis 9 Verse 3 God said to Noah "All moving things that liveth shall be meat for you." Genesis 27 Verse 3 "Now therefore take, I pray thee,thy weapons,THY QUIVER AND THY BOW,and go out to the field and take some venison." Man as hunted for survival since the dawn of time and that is the way God meant for it to be. The good Lord decided to bless this earth with both predators and prey. Humans were put here as predators.
There are two kinds of meat eaters on this planet, predators and scavengers. Predators kill there own food, scavengers eat because others kill. I choose to be a predator. The simple fact is that animals were put on the face of the earth to feed humans. I get beside myself when I see an animal rights hypocrite stand there and tell me how inhumane it is that I hunt and he is standing there in leather shoes with a leather wallet. My favorite is “there is no need to hunt today we can buy the food”. I must be confused because I assumed that someone had to kill the chicken or the cow before they got to the grocery store but some how that is all right. If you eat meat or use animal products then you are just as guilty of “animal murder” as the man at the slaughterhouse, because you ordered the “HIT”. If a human put an order out to kill another human then they would be just as guilty as the person that committed the murder. So why should you not be held responsible for ordering your chicken salad (chicken murder) or your “Nike” jogging shoes(cow murder).
Most of the hunters I know are kind, compassionate, careful and courteous. However, in hunting just like every other “walks of life” we have our bad apples that tend to make the rest of us look bad. But, I don’t judge you as a reckless driver because other people drive while intoxicated. It is time we disassociate the term “hunter” with the various negative connotations.
I have been hunting all my life and I am proud to say that I share my passion with some of the best people in the world. I absolutely detest people that are cruel to animals. I would not hesitate for one moment to turn a family member in that hit or mistreated his animals. However, deer hunting is not an inhumane activity. I would also like to point what a tremendous come back that almost all of our game species have made. We owe this to the concerned sportsman. You will never find anyone as interested in the preservation of our eco system as sportsmen are. With society spreading further and further and infringing on the animal’s habitat, it is the sportsman who have provided the monetary means necessary to secure both Federal and State wildlife sanctuaries for the animals. It is the sportsman that put millions of dollars every year toward restoration of habitat. I certainly respect any human’s decision not to hunt; however I wish others would respect my right to hunt. Without the hunter as a part of the eco system the entire system would break down. Without hunters game would over populate. Once the game began to overpopulate in breeding would occur. Once the animals began to inbreed they would progressively tend to produce more inferior genes. After the inferior genes began to permeate the species, diseases would start through the weakened animals and eventually the species would either cease to exist or face a major die-off. Personally the thought of a deer starving to death over a period of months sounds a lot less inhumane than the thought of one dying instantly without even knowing.
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Old 03-14-2002 | 11:45 AM
  #70  
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From: Butler, Pa (back home after all these years)
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Everyone has pretty much said it all. All I can say is that it is our God given right, and it is a shame that we have to battle to keep that right. But as long as I am able I will fight to protect that right in any capacity that I can. Just remember there are men and women fighting every day for our rights. More so today than ever.

Might sound corny to some. but GOD BLESS THE USA.

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