44hunter45
Well-known member
Two points:Good points. Except @neffa3 is a putz. Prove me wrong.
1) He has a canoe.
2) He authored the greatest HT thread of all time, "There's a marmot in my truck."
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Two points:Good points. Except @neffa3 is a putz. Prove me wrong.
Points taken.Two points:
1) He has a canoe.
2) He authored the greatest HT thread of all time, "There's a marmot in my truck."
Wow,,,Yes, you are missing some huge things.I’m totally missing something.
Haven’t we been doing these very things?
Hasn’t there been concentrated efforts to bring more women, youth and others into the hunting community?
Haven’t we tried to improve our image by not strapping critters on the hood and such?
Started donating animals to food banks etc.?
Created and protected critical habitat through conservancies and such? (RMEF)
The list goes on and on with efforts being taken to be more inclusive and improve stereotypes and negative images of the past.
How have we dropped the ball?
Imperfect, probably.
There’s always been hikers, biker, berry pickers, photographers, nature lovers and flower sniffers of every sort. This guise of not being included is horse crap.
Nothing.View attachment 249517
This may warrant a completely new thread if you have the answer. But what did Shane Mahoney say that was controversial?
Wow, I don’t wanna be a hunter anymore……what a bunch of complete dirtbags.Wow,,,Yes, you are missing some huge things.
Let me offer you a window that most non-hunters or anti-hunters see hunters through.
Please forget about donating your meat to food pantries, unless you have an archery tag. Otherwise, they will no longer accept it due to real concerns about hundreds of tiny lead fragments. Maybe 5% to 7% of hunters have switched to non-lead bullets
Your average nature lover/hiker non-hunter reads magazines about the outdoors and in them they will regularly see photos of birds of prey and eagles poisoned by lead in carcasses that has been absolutely positively identified as coming from lead bullets. Most hunters scoff at this.
The condor is still in dire trouble. Yes, the non-lead bullet law has been passed there but so many non-compliant hunters are the problem.
The same problem happens in Japan with Stellars sea eagles dying from hunters using lead bullets even after the law has been passed banning lead. Hunters there scoff at this.
Next, Manmade climate change. Most nature lovers are up to their ears in reading about one threatened species after another from Climate change. Far too many hunters scoff at this.
Next killing Derbies, competitions to see how many animals can be killed. All over the anti-hunter websites there are pictures of piles of dead animals. One photo showed many dead coyotes lined up in the snow to spell “PETA”. Kill fest contests are a regular part predator and varmint hunting
RMEF has changed, so many biologists have left. The Murie foundation named after Olaus Murie considered the father of elk conservation has cut all ties with the RMEF, which now has a former Rodeo and NASCAR promoter in charge. The RMEF now denies such basic foundations of field biology such as “Tropic Cascade. In which predators are valued as part of an intact biological system.
Look at Utah, a state often lauded by hunters as an example of great elk success story. Utah,,,during a record drought had 13,000 elk over a healthy max limit. That equals 40,000 under the number of deer they should have, CWD is on the way getting closer by the day and “Pando” the largest living organism on earth, a cloned aspen grove, is dying from over grazing. I have read in one hunt one blog after another how hunters could care less about this
Non hunter nature lovers care about all life, plants and animals and most hunters care only about filling their tag,
Add in the images of hunters dressed in camo and hunting with assault rifles or long-range sniper rifles and riding quads and wanting them allowed in more places and you really wonder why you aren’t getting new recruits?
The time is coming rapidly when hunter dollars are shrinking and the new money will come from two sources, one the nature lovers who don’t hunt, and competing with them for our resources will be private hunting organizations.
They won’t be able to buy public land,,,just lease it forever.
We need to have a talkWow,,,Yes, you are missing some huge things.
Let me offer you a window that most non-hunters or anti-hunters see hunters through.
Please forget about donating your meat to food pantries, unless you have an archery tag. Otherwise, they will no longer accept it due to real concerns about hundreds of tiny lead fragments. Maybe 5% to 7% of hunters have switched to non-lead bullets
Your average nature lover/hiker non-hunter reads magazines about the outdoors and in them they will regularly see photos of birds of prey and eagles poisoned by lead in carcasses that has been absolutely positively identified as coming from lead bullets. Most hunters scoff at this.
The condor is still in dire trouble. Yes, the non-lead bullet law has been passed there but so many non-compliant hunters are the problem.
The same problem happens in Japan with Stellars sea eagles dying from hunters using lead bullets even after the law has been passed banning lead. Hunters there scoff at this.
Next, Manmade climate change. Most nature lovers are up to their ears in reading about one threatened species after another from Climate change. Far too many hunters scoff at this.
Next killing Derbies, competitions to see how many animals can be killed. All over the anti-hunter websites there are pictures of piles of dead animals. One photo showed many dead coyotes lined up in the snow to spell “PETA”. Kill fest contests are a regular part predator and varmint hunting
RMEF has changed, so many biologists have left. The Murie foundation named after Olaus Murie considered the father of elk conservation has cut all ties with the RMEF, which now has a former Rodeo and NASCAR promoter in charge. The RMEF now denies such basic foundations of field biology such as “Tropic Cascade. In which predators are valued as part of an intact biological system.
Look at Utah, a state often lauded by hunters as an example of great elk success story. Utah,,,during a record drought had 13,000 elk over a healthy max limit. That equals 40,000 under the number of deer they should have, CWD is on the way getting closer by the day and “Pando” the largest living organism on earth, a cloned aspen grove, is dying from over grazing. I have read in one hunt one blog after another how hunters could care less about this
Non hunter nature lovers care about all life, plants and animals and most hunters care only about filling their tag,
Add in the images of hunters dressed in camo and hunting with assault rifles or long-range sniper rifles and riding quads and wanting them allowed in more places and you really wonder why you aren’t getting new recruits?
The time is coming rapidly when hunter dollars are shrinking and the new money will come from two sources, one the nature lovers who don’t hunt, and competing with them for our resources will be private hunting organizations.
They won’t be able to buy public land,,,just lease it forever.
I think folks took issue with the word “citizen” in his explanation of the NA model feeling that the term excludes indeginous peoples and denotes a “settler” centric world view.View attachment 249517
This may warrant a completely new thread if you have the answer. But what did Shane Mahoney say that was controversial?
I spent nearly ten years delivering annual pro-hunting presentations to a very politically active branch of a major conservation organization.Wow, I don’t wanna be a hunter anymore……what a bunch of complete dirtbags.
Understand you are trying to illustrate a different viewpoint but I wouldn’t say most or the majority of non-hunters view hunters that negatively. Now anti-hunters is a different demographic, they are determined to end all hunting everywhere and this viewpoint very much supports their agenda.
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This stuff must be a little depressing for Shane Mahoney. You spend massive amounts of time and effort trying to help people value the outdoors, and what do you get in return? Accused of patriarchy, and sort of by extension racism, just because you have a sense of the history involved.I think folks took issue with the word “citizen” in his explanation of the NA model feeling that the term excludes indeginous peoples and denotes a “settler” centric world view.
Mahoney is also a big T. Roosevelt proponent and they take onus with Roosevlet’s racist and jingoist policies and beliefs.
So IMHO nothing that Mahoney did specifically, but rather took issue with promoting a white patriarchal perspective on public lands and game management.
Please save the @s and reply’s I’m communicating the issue not passing judgements or arguing anything. Deep breaths keyboard warriors.
Roosevelt has a complex legacy.This stuff must be a little depressing for Shane Mahoney. You spend massive amounts of time and effort trying to help people value the outdoors, and what do you get in return? Accused of patriarchy, and sort of by extension racism, just because you have a sense of the history involved.
I find that utterly distasteful.
Agreed, but what historical figure isn't complex?Roosevelt has a complex legacy.
Conservatives flagrantly overlook and minimize the fact that he was a staunch progressive, in todays political landscape he would probably be most aligned with Bernie Sanders/ AOC.
Liberals tend to focus more on his hawkish foreign policy. At the time this country viewed native peoples as foreign adversaries.
I have a lot of respect for Mahoney, he has an amazing ability to distill history.
Hopefully he can take those criticisms in stride and thoughtfully adjust his remarks.
Ok I guess I’ll just defer to your superior expertise and return to my informational bubble. I do have one question though. If a hunter were to intentionally seek out older age class animals, would that be good biology or bad biology?I spent nearly ten years delivering annual pro-hunting presentations to a very politically active branch of a major conservation organization.
I doubt any of you have done something like that. Mostly you just stay in your informational bubble and give each other the same feedback.
The national vice president who as a member of this local group was a biology teacher. I was a biology teacher. We had that in common and became friends with time. She admitted an anti-hunting lean in her views but still she was open to new science-based information.
Also, for that same period I was taking weeklong field biology classes at both the Teton Science School and the Yellowstone Institute, with many who did not hunt
Lastly, I had several monthly nature/hunting theme columns I wrote for papers on the west coast, east coast and in Wyoming. They were very well received, and I got lots of positive feedback from my readers, even non hunters. Doing all this for so long offered me a huge long-term window into how those that do not hunt feel.
The biggest problem with our modern hunting is that it cannot leave its original model which began a few thousand years ago with herding cultures around the middle east.
The prototype looks like this. Amass wealth in the form of large herds of grazing animals, kill off all wild competition for forage, kill off all predators that could eat your livestock and then just overgraze the land and find a new place to go, often taking over land from other groups.
We had some real advantages here in the New World and that with science education and a new mindset allowed some new thinking but still this old herding society mindset sets the rules with most F and G agencie$.
Oddly it was WW1 which opened up the saving of our wildlife.
Returning WW1 vets, who saw how Europe was stripped of most all wildlife were the ones who began the movement which after a few decades resulted in the Pittman Robertson Federal Aid to Wildlife Act which drew funding from hunters and gun owners,,,,to save BOTH GAME AND NON-GAME animals alike.
I wrote about that several times and doing the research found out that without support from some women's garden clubs through the Midwest,,,just hounding politicians to vote for it, Pittman Robertson never would have passed.
Hunters have lost their way from the original “save all wildlife” stance and have hence lost support.
This hunting season will be my 57th. I am a lifelong hunter, but I will only hunt when, where, and how it constitutes “Good biology”
An example is my never killing the best game animals. Having most hunters, craving taking home the best buck or bull elk is bad biology, since it constantly pulls out the best genes from a wild population thus making the genetics of a herd weaker,,,the exact opposite of what predators do, killing the young, the very old, the sick and the weak.
What I have found over and over with non-hunters and antihunters, is that it is science ignorant and ignoble hunting practices that sets them off.
You read this while drinking? It probably made more sense to you than it did to me then.Hmmm… so I’ve really tried to read all this thread and take multiple viewpoints into consideration. FYI, I am drinking delicious IPA’s and getting pissed at the Zags performance so far. So a couple of thoughts…
1. How do we get people to understand they’re a part of an ecosystem?
2. How do we bring hunters together, build a common vision for what a hunter is, and share that with the public?
3. What do I do? I live in Spokane, and want to make a difference. I am a member of RMEF since the early 90’s and a newer member of the Back Country Hunters Association, as well as other organizations. What group is going to tackle this challenge?
My buddies Dad, Pappa Fitz, would say, “Quit your bitchin’ Hamm, what you gonna do?”
How old ? Past breeding age, past passing on great genes! Good biology. Still of healthy breeding age bad biology.Ok I guess I’ll just defer to your superior expertise and return to my informational bubble. I do have one question though. If a hunter were to intentionally seek out older age class animals, would that be good biology or bad biology?
I want to vomit ..I think folks took issue with the word “citizen” in his explanation of the NA model feeling that the term excludes indeginous peoples and denotes a “settler” centric world view.
Mahoney is also a big T. Roosevelt proponent and they take onus with Roosevlet’s racist and jingoist policies and beliefs.
So IMHO nothing that Mahoney did specifically, but rather took issue with promoting a white patriarchal perspective on public lands and game management.
Please save the @s and reply’s I’m communicating the issue not passing judgements or arguing anything. Deep breaths keyboard warriors.