Nameless Range
Well-known member
It’s tough to spend such beautiful Montana weekend out of the hills, but this is my last weekend of call for work for the season, so I did chores around the house and listened to this podcast episode this morning.
I know Matt Rinella and his perspective has been discussed many times on here, and I’ll admit to only having listened to a couple of his podcast episodes prior. I actually really enjoyed this one, and he clarified some of his positions that I had preconceived notions about. I feel that many of the criticism he generally levies at hunting personalities, don’t really apply to the purveyor of this site. That said, these were some things he mentioned that made me think:
-He mentioned that what he sees as the chief issues modern hunters face in terms of their experiences are – animal numbers, tag allocation, and land on which to hunt. One thing he said was that conservation organizations don’t have the average sportsman, in mind with their work. His claim was that the number one constituent of most conservation orgs is the hunting industry. I don’t think this is always true – for example, I think the 3 R effort on-net hurts the average sportsman, but some of the orgs pushing for that are also some of the few orgs out there speaking up for the tag allocation of the average sportsman. On the other hand, it sure seems that some orgs have been captured by $. It left me thinking that, of the 3 issues he mentions, a lot of orgs may work on one or two, but rarely do they work on all three.
-Another thing he spoke about was the impact an individual who shoots a dozen big game animals a year has on the opportunity of others. Not in terms of actual population loss, but in how it may motivate others reasons for hunting. Personally I have a gut reaction to someone taking more than they “need” in terms of elk or deer and it isn't good. But then again, I don’t “need” even one elk.
-He spoke to the perception of how folks think he is anti-social media in hunting. He clarified that he thinks there should be more hunting related social media surrounding advocacy. Hunt quietly. Advocate Loudly. Thought that was interesting.
-It was asked of him what would look like success to him if his “movement” were successful. One thing he mentioned that would be good would be that: It should be widely acknowledged that hiring an outfitter to take you out and show you a deer or elk that you then shoot is in no way an accomplishment. I couldn’t agree more.
- Another thing he talked about was the hypocrisy of GoHunt and OnX. I can’t really speak to GoHunt, but he did mention how weird it was that the owner of OnX bemoans landlocked public land, but then advertises his hunts on land that locks the public behind it. Maybe there isn’t a contradiction there. My own story with OnX was at a conference a few years ago. Someone, who if I recall right was the VP there, gave a presentation on their secret study of inaccessible public lands, and the millions of acres that are. I approached him afterward, and told him that they oughta let the public know which lands they have deemed inaccessible – maybe put it in the app. They could then crowdsource either existing access their automated process didn’t identify, or even crowdsource solutions by mining local knowledge. I was told, “That would upset a lot of landowners”….
There was a lot more. In the end, I don't agree with him on everything, but it really seems his goal is to get hunters to reorient their own hunting motivations, and I found myself thinking he made a lot of good sense, and maybe I hadn’t really grasped his positions entirely. Worth a listen IMO.
Hunt Quietly Podcast
The future of hunting is imperiled. More and more hunters are competing for limited numbers of licenses. Public land hunting is increasingly overcrowded, and private land hunting is inc…
huntquietly.org
I know Matt Rinella and his perspective has been discussed many times on here, and I’ll admit to only having listened to a couple of his podcast episodes prior. I actually really enjoyed this one, and he clarified some of his positions that I had preconceived notions about. I feel that many of the criticism he generally levies at hunting personalities, don’t really apply to the purveyor of this site. That said, these were some things he mentioned that made me think:
-He mentioned that what he sees as the chief issues modern hunters face in terms of their experiences are – animal numbers, tag allocation, and land on which to hunt. One thing he said was that conservation organizations don’t have the average sportsman, in mind with their work. His claim was that the number one constituent of most conservation orgs is the hunting industry. I don’t think this is always true – for example, I think the 3 R effort on-net hurts the average sportsman, but some of the orgs pushing for that are also some of the few orgs out there speaking up for the tag allocation of the average sportsman. On the other hand, it sure seems that some orgs have been captured by $. It left me thinking that, of the 3 issues he mentions, a lot of orgs may work on one or two, but rarely do they work on all three.
-Another thing he spoke about was the impact an individual who shoots a dozen big game animals a year has on the opportunity of others. Not in terms of actual population loss, but in how it may motivate others reasons for hunting. Personally I have a gut reaction to someone taking more than they “need” in terms of elk or deer and it isn't good. But then again, I don’t “need” even one elk.
-He spoke to the perception of how folks think he is anti-social media in hunting. He clarified that he thinks there should be more hunting related social media surrounding advocacy. Hunt quietly. Advocate Loudly. Thought that was interesting.
-It was asked of him what would look like success to him if his “movement” were successful. One thing he mentioned that would be good would be that: It should be widely acknowledged that hiring an outfitter to take you out and show you a deer or elk that you then shoot is in no way an accomplishment. I couldn’t agree more.
- Another thing he talked about was the hypocrisy of GoHunt and OnX. I can’t really speak to GoHunt, but he did mention how weird it was that the owner of OnX bemoans landlocked public land, but then advertises his hunts on land that locks the public behind it. Maybe there isn’t a contradiction there. My own story with OnX was at a conference a few years ago. Someone, who if I recall right was the VP there, gave a presentation on their secret study of inaccessible public lands, and the millions of acres that are. I approached him afterward, and told him that they oughta let the public know which lands they have deemed inaccessible – maybe put it in the app. They could then crowdsource either existing access their automated process didn’t identify, or even crowdsource solutions by mining local knowledge. I was told, “That would upset a lot of landowners”….
There was a lot more. In the end, I don't agree with him on everything, but it really seems his goal is to get hunters to reorient their own hunting motivations, and I found myself thinking he made a lot of good sense, and maybe I hadn’t really grasped his positions entirely. Worth a listen IMO.
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