redduck
Member
This happened to me a few weeks ago and I thought it was an interesting experience.
My wife just graduated from nursing school in Los Angeles, so me and the friends and family decide to have a party. One of the graduates graciously agrees to host the party, and all we have to do is brings some drinks. We show up to a beautiful home next to the beach with killer views. The food was off the chain, and everything was going well…I started talking to one of my wife’s classmates father Sean. He was a hardcore backcountry, backpacker fly fisherman. He was telling me about all his adventures in the Bitter Roots, Sierras, and a whole bunch of top notch fly fishing destinations. Sean was the first person that I have met in Los Angeles that knew all about the current conservation issues. I am a hunter and proud of it and everyone who knows me or my wife knows that I am a hunter. I told Sean about my first turkey by Ramona California, and then he preceded to tell me how he used to turkey hunt with his grandfather in the Midwest. I then started to talk to his family and found out they were Vegetarians? I was starting to get perplexed by the situation, and I said: “Wait how can you be a vegetarian I saw all of you eating kale burrito turkey wraps ten minutes ago?”. They kindly told me that the family decided to go meatless some years ago for health and environment reason. Then I said again I saw you eating meat 10 minutes ago? Then they preceded to tell me about how they had to start eating some meats because they were getting sick and the doctors told them they weren’t getting enough amino acids and other things in their diet. I told them you can’t be mostly vegetarian and still be vegetarian it just doesn’t work that way. Sean's wife then told me that they were cultural vegetarian. We talked some more about the wolf reintroduction into Yellowstone, and then we went our separate ways.
My wife graduated school but didn’t take her NCLEX examine which makes her a Registered Nurse. My wife then goes to a study session and starts talking to the girls. My wife started talking to Sean’s daughter and said my husband had a great time talking to your dad and they should go hunting sometime. This is where the situation got intense. She said” MY FATHER HAS NEVER HARMED A LIVING THING IN HIS LIFE!!!HE EVEN DOES CATCH AND Releases WHEN HE FISHES, AND HE WOULD NEVER BE A HUNTER.” This woman acted like her father was a Nazi and killed hundreds of people. Sean's daughter didn’t have a clue about hunters or our culture and thought the idea of her dad being a hunter was offensive to her. I was, even more, trouble that this man didn't teach his daughter about hunting and hide it the fact that he hunted in his youth. This was the first time I felt an anti-hunter sentiment in Los Angeles. This situation made me realized I need to start reaching out and educating non-hunters about conservation, hunting, and public land issues. The general public doesn’t know the first thing about hunters or our culture, and show them that we are more than just the stereotype.
My wife just graduated from nursing school in Los Angeles, so me and the friends and family decide to have a party. One of the graduates graciously agrees to host the party, and all we have to do is brings some drinks. We show up to a beautiful home next to the beach with killer views. The food was off the chain, and everything was going well…I started talking to one of my wife’s classmates father Sean. He was a hardcore backcountry, backpacker fly fisherman. He was telling me about all his adventures in the Bitter Roots, Sierras, and a whole bunch of top notch fly fishing destinations. Sean was the first person that I have met in Los Angeles that knew all about the current conservation issues. I am a hunter and proud of it and everyone who knows me or my wife knows that I am a hunter. I told Sean about my first turkey by Ramona California, and then he preceded to tell me how he used to turkey hunt with his grandfather in the Midwest. I then started to talk to his family and found out they were Vegetarians? I was starting to get perplexed by the situation, and I said: “Wait how can you be a vegetarian I saw all of you eating kale burrito turkey wraps ten minutes ago?”. They kindly told me that the family decided to go meatless some years ago for health and environment reason. Then I said again I saw you eating meat 10 minutes ago? Then they preceded to tell me about how they had to start eating some meats because they were getting sick and the doctors told them they weren’t getting enough amino acids and other things in their diet. I told them you can’t be mostly vegetarian and still be vegetarian it just doesn’t work that way. Sean's wife then told me that they were cultural vegetarian. We talked some more about the wolf reintroduction into Yellowstone, and then we went our separate ways.
My wife graduated school but didn’t take her NCLEX examine which makes her a Registered Nurse. My wife then goes to a study session and starts talking to the girls. My wife started talking to Sean’s daughter and said my husband had a great time talking to your dad and they should go hunting sometime. This is where the situation got intense. She said” MY FATHER HAS NEVER HARMED A LIVING THING IN HIS LIFE!!!HE EVEN DOES CATCH AND Releases WHEN HE FISHES, AND HE WOULD NEVER BE A HUNTER.” This woman acted like her father was a Nazi and killed hundreds of people. Sean's daughter didn’t have a clue about hunters or our culture and thought the idea of her dad being a hunter was offensive to her. I was, even more, trouble that this man didn't teach his daughter about hunting and hide it the fact that he hunted in his youth. This was the first time I felt an anti-hunter sentiment in Los Angeles. This situation made me realized I need to start reaching out and educating non-hunters about conservation, hunting, and public land issues. The general public doesn’t know the first thing about hunters or our culture, and show them that we are more than just the stereotype.