I spent a little while ruminating as to the merits of creating this thread. I can respect Randy's request to take comments and opinions about such programs to a different venue than the class announcement, so here goes.
I read @Bozone 's post about the adult onset hunter who went through the class. Cool story, and I'm genuinely happy for the person. I'm sure there are a number of other similar stories out there that follow the same theme.
My skepticism with the program is based on several factors. First, it creates a "title" that may or may not truly reflect competency, ethics, and sportsmanship. For every story like the above mentioned, I can also tell you stories of master hunters who flock shot, trespassed, didn't tag animals, and did various other things that didn't necessarily reflect well in the eyes of the public. Do these negate the value of the program in its entirety? Absolutely not. They do however, show the difficulty involved in the screening and training of master hunters to truly reflect what the programs are intended to do.
My second concern is the slippery slope of trending towards egalitarianism. Master hunter programs are built around offering incentive hunts, whereby the graduates can have opportunity the rest of the unwashed public doesn't. Yes, the MH did invest time and effort into achieving their status. That said, I know of a number of master hunters I would never hunt with in a million years. I also know of a number of non-master hunters who know enough to teach the classes. However, without the title, they are not afforded the additional opportunity. I struggle with this. Are we trending more and more towards a European model of Jaegermeisters?
I guarantee you there will be folks who enter this program simply for the self serving benefits. There will be some who will completely betray their role as a hunting ambassador, and will make us all look like buffoons. I don't know what the answers are. I'm not that smart. Experience tells me to not just jump headfirst into the pool though. I know @onpoint shares my skepticism. Maybe we are just a couple of jaded old bastards ready to be put out to pasture. However, sometimes there is a very fine line between jaded cynicism and realism.
As I said, I hope the program is a resounding success.
I read @Bozone 's post about the adult onset hunter who went through the class. Cool story, and I'm genuinely happy for the person. I'm sure there are a number of other similar stories out there that follow the same theme.
My skepticism with the program is based on several factors. First, it creates a "title" that may or may not truly reflect competency, ethics, and sportsmanship. For every story like the above mentioned, I can also tell you stories of master hunters who flock shot, trespassed, didn't tag animals, and did various other things that didn't necessarily reflect well in the eyes of the public. Do these negate the value of the program in its entirety? Absolutely not. They do however, show the difficulty involved in the screening and training of master hunters to truly reflect what the programs are intended to do.
My second concern is the slippery slope of trending towards egalitarianism. Master hunter programs are built around offering incentive hunts, whereby the graduates can have opportunity the rest of the unwashed public doesn't. Yes, the MH did invest time and effort into achieving their status. That said, I know of a number of master hunters I would never hunt with in a million years. I also know of a number of non-master hunters who know enough to teach the classes. However, without the title, they are not afforded the additional opportunity. I struggle with this. Are we trending more and more towards a European model of Jaegermeisters?
I guarantee you there will be folks who enter this program simply for the self serving benefits. There will be some who will completely betray their role as a hunting ambassador, and will make us all look like buffoons. I don't know what the answers are. I'm not that smart. Experience tells me to not just jump headfirst into the pool though. I know @onpoint shares my skepticism. Maybe we are just a couple of jaded old bastards ready to be put out to pasture. However, sometimes there is a very fine line between jaded cynicism and realism.
As I said, I hope the program is a resounding success.