get-n-birdy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2016
- Messages
- 198
Emotional responses are pretty easy to see through.
Will give him a little bit of a pass, cause he probably feels some guilt from just the possibility he could have prevented it. Slim chance, but that might eat at him on an emotional level non of us can really understand.
Live or hunt in wild places, the nature of the natural world is going to punch you in the teeth eventually, just like the urban jungle.
There's no preventing everything, even if Grizzlies where managed more. But better management could lead to better health of the grizzly population and give them a little more fear of humans. Which in turn would be better for the grizzly and humans alike. To turn everything against or for, anti or pro anything, takes it to extremism.
A wolf, a grizzly, a deer, an elk, etc, they should all be managed for balance. There's no balance with eliminating them from the landscape or letting them remain protected with no scrutiny, when it's not good for all inhabitants of the ground we all share.
The frustration comes from having booming populations, that have no factual scientific or biological reasoning for being protected. Both ends of the spectrum get emotionally invested in self interests. But when those self interests are tipped one sided, by groups that rarely have any skin in the game, the ones that do have skin in the game become resentful. That resentment compounds and erodes trust.
When statements, facts and statistics, don't jive with reality, people who live with critters, being managed outside facts, locals get strongly opinionated and begin the long trek down the road of bitterness to a situation beyond their control. That leads to feeling vulnerable and helpless, nobody likes feeling like that.
There could very well been nothing plausible that could have prevented this tragedy. To live in the what if's or the hypothetical arena leads one along the valley floor on the road to nowhere.
Sad to see conservation, veering towards preservation, which are two totally differing ideals.
Will give him a little bit of a pass, cause he probably feels some guilt from just the possibility he could have prevented it. Slim chance, but that might eat at him on an emotional level non of us can really understand.
Live or hunt in wild places, the nature of the natural world is going to punch you in the teeth eventually, just like the urban jungle.
There's no preventing everything, even if Grizzlies where managed more. But better management could lead to better health of the grizzly population and give them a little more fear of humans. Which in turn would be better for the grizzly and humans alike. To turn everything against or for, anti or pro anything, takes it to extremism.
A wolf, a grizzly, a deer, an elk, etc, they should all be managed for balance. There's no balance with eliminating them from the landscape or letting them remain protected with no scrutiny, when it's not good for all inhabitants of the ground we all share.
The frustration comes from having booming populations, that have no factual scientific or biological reasoning for being protected. Both ends of the spectrum get emotionally invested in self interests. But when those self interests are tipped one sided, by groups that rarely have any skin in the game, the ones that do have skin in the game become resentful. That resentment compounds and erodes trust.
When statements, facts and statistics, don't jive with reality, people who live with critters, being managed outside facts, locals get strongly opinionated and begin the long trek down the road of bitterness to a situation beyond their control. That leads to feeling vulnerable and helpless, nobody likes feeling like that.
There could very well been nothing plausible that could have prevented this tragedy. To live in the what if's or the hypothetical arena leads one along the valley floor on the road to nowhere.
Sad to see conservation, veering towards preservation, which are two totally differing ideals.