These are some great replies. Great topic.
I have never been in a situation that Goldtip, MTMiller, or Buzz have described. Would do what they did, with whatever tool or weapon I could find. And, I would be very upset about how the situation came to be.
I have the wounded animal scenario happen to me a few times, where I was looking to fill a tag, and all times I shot the animal. The circumstances made the decision pretty easy.
Now, if it was the first day when I had my Arizona Strip mule deer tag, and it was a 3X3, I would be struggling hard on that one. Really, I would probably let him go, unless the warden told me it was OK, or I would put him out of his agony and tell the warden what I did. If the warden felt it necessary to write me a ticket, so be it.
If it was my Montana elk tag this year, or my NV or AZ elk tags, again, it would have been hard to shoot the animal early in the hunt. As many have said, should a hunter feel obligated to clean up a mess created by mother nature, vehicles, fences, or other hunters? I think we all want to see the suffering end, and if the coyotes or ravens get a meal, good for them, but at least the suffering has stopped for the animal.
I think we all would like to do the right thing and put it out of its misery, and I probably would, under any condition. But, would I use my tag, as I did in the three instances I have mentioned? Not sure.
If it looked like the meat would be inedible, no way would I burn my tag on it. If it was edible, I would possibly tag it, or at least ask the warden if I could salvage the meat and bring it to a food bank, or something. Would hate to see good meat go to waste.
Guess it just depends on the circumstances. Without a doubt, I would do all I can to bring an end to an animal's pain. I will take my chances on whether or not that gets me in trouble. Tagging it is another issue.
Looking forward to more of these comments.
Probably another equally difficult struggle is what Devil Diver mentioned. You know you have hit an animal. Do you say, "Ah, what the hell, stuff like that happens." Then go hunting for another one. Or, knowing you struck a mortal blow, do you quit hunting and do all you can to recover the animal.
I suspect that possiblity has as many"depends" scenarios as the original post of this thread.
I have never been in a situation that Goldtip, MTMiller, or Buzz have described. Would do what they did, with whatever tool or weapon I could find. And, I would be very upset about how the situation came to be.
I have the wounded animal scenario happen to me a few times, where I was looking to fill a tag, and all times I shot the animal. The circumstances made the decision pretty easy.
Now, if it was the first day when I had my Arizona Strip mule deer tag, and it was a 3X3, I would be struggling hard on that one. Really, I would probably let him go, unless the warden told me it was OK, or I would put him out of his agony and tell the warden what I did. If the warden felt it necessary to write me a ticket, so be it.
If it was my Montana elk tag this year, or my NV or AZ elk tags, again, it would have been hard to shoot the animal early in the hunt. As many have said, should a hunter feel obligated to clean up a mess created by mother nature, vehicles, fences, or other hunters? I think we all want to see the suffering end, and if the coyotes or ravens get a meal, good for them, but at least the suffering has stopped for the animal.
I think we all would like to do the right thing and put it out of its misery, and I probably would, under any condition. But, would I use my tag, as I did in the three instances I have mentioned? Not sure.
If it looked like the meat would be inedible, no way would I burn my tag on it. If it was edible, I would possibly tag it, or at least ask the warden if I could salvage the meat and bring it to a food bank, or something. Would hate to see good meat go to waste.
Guess it just depends on the circumstances. Without a doubt, I would do all I can to bring an end to an animal's pain. I will take my chances on whether or not that gets me in trouble. Tagging it is another issue.
Looking forward to more of these comments.
Probably another equally difficult struggle is what Devil Diver mentioned. You know you have hit an animal. Do you say, "Ah, what the hell, stuff like that happens." Then go hunting for another one. Or, knowing you struck a mortal blow, do you quit hunting and do all you can to recover the animal.
I suspect that possiblity has as many"depends" scenarios as the original post of this thread.