Maybe so, but this truly is a ideological issue.No. But I'm not an ideologue who tries to make everything us v them. So, I got that going for me.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Maybe so, but this truly is a ideological issue.No. But I'm not an ideologue who tries to make everything us v them. So, I got that going for me.
In the first case one needs to control your dog.Clearly you're not a golfer.
Setters range wide, get in a snare and you're on another bird. Dog is dead.
Lab goes after duck in a pond, hits the leghold trap just out of sight of where you are, dog dies from drowning. C'mon man, it's not so difficult to recognize that there is a lot conflict here.
Nope, not this one - avid rural hunters (i.e., conservatives) in MN led by a long time and current trapper are the ones pushing this issue here.Maybe so, but this truly is a ideological issue.
You can keep saying it, but many great hunters including a consistent national field trail champion from MN disagree with you.In the first case one needs to control your dog.
In the second and I have hunted ducks with labs for years..keep an eye on the dog.
The issues you are bring up are dog handler issues, and have nothing to do with trapping.
Blasphemy apparentlySo one group of sportsmen has to give something up for the other? mtmuley
So one group of sportsmen has to give something up for the other? mtmuley
No, not really. Pretty easy to request a regulation aimed at trappers because it interferes with your bird hunting. Or, so you say. This type of thing just chips away at what we do. mtmuleyBlasphemy apparently
I've let several of your comments about controlling your dog go, but it is obvious you know very little about bird dogs, especially pointing dogs. Any decent pointing dog will routinely, in open country, be hundreds of yards from its handler. It is common for two dogs to be hunting independently from each other at the same time.In the first case one needs to control your dog.
In the second and I have hunted ducks with labs for years..keep an eye on the dog.
The issues you are bring up are dog handler issues, and have nothing to do with trapping.
Plenty of ways to trap. All of life is compromises and balancing of competing interests. Seasons, tags, lotteries, bag limits, size limits, types of implements, etc etc. there has never been a time in the last 100 years where these balances weren’t being struck. There is no basis for saying that what ever Bob Smith was doing in Nov 1, 1975 is the way it should be for all people for all time.No, not really. Pretty easy to request a regulation aimed at trappers because it interferes with your bird hunting. Or, so you say. This type of thing just chips away at what we do. mtmuley
I do not believe that if trappers gave up what is being asked that the sport as a whole is safe. Chipping away. mtmuleyPlenty of ways to trap. All of life is compromises and balancing of competing interests. Seasons, tags, lotteries, bag limits, size limits, types of implements, etc etc. there has never been a time in the last 100 years where these balances weren’t being struck. There is no basis for saying that what ever Bob Smith was doing in Nov 1, 1975 is the way it should be for all people for all time.
This started out with a trapper asking other trappers to make a small change. Then it became fellow outdoorsman asking for the same. But the belligerence of the trappers has poisoned the waters and now there are folks that are going after the whole sport, folks that would have supported the trapper before. Bad politics, and they will ultimately lose, where they could have had a reasonable outcome.
When it’s between trapping and other activities trapping is always the one that has to compromiseI do not believe that if trappers gave up what is being asked that the sport as a whole is safe. Chipping away. mtmuley
And for that very reason I’m gonna take advantage of as many opportunities as I can while it’s still left.The days of hunting and trapping on public lands may have some decades left, but your grandkids won’t be doing it when they’re old. I think that’s an uncomfortable reality.