Nameless Range
Well-known member
Orion The Hunter's Institute put this up on their Facebook feed yesterday. A short interview with Ted Nugent.
http://outdoorchannel.com/article.aspx?id=22835&articletype=article&key=nugent-takes-py-to-task&p=wc
Uncle Ted has a problem with P & Y, the "demonization" of high-fence operations, and the consensus definition of fair-chase. This isn't news and Nugent is low hanging fruit. But considering he has such a large audience and his word is the highest commandment for many, it's worth seeing what his latest rants entail, because surely you'll be hearing them from someone else later.
"The fact is that all scientific studies show that the deer breeders are the victims of failed state game agencies mishandling of bovine TB, CWD, EHD and other real world cervid diseases, not the perpetrators."-Nugent
I wonder what his idol, Fred Bear, would think.
"I see the animal not only as a target but as a living creature with more freedom than I will ever have." -Fred Bear
Freedom in a fence?
I think Steven Rinella has it right. From his book MeatEater
"Certain activities are definitely not fair-chase,such as the pathetic practice of hunting animals inside high-wire fences".
It's a shame that this guy represents hunters to the non-hunting community. He is as much a danger to the future of public lands hunting as any politician out there.
I'm getting off work early today to go look for bear. I don't know if there will be a bear in the gulch I'm gonna hunt. In fact I don't know if a bear will be within ten miles of me. If I'm lucky enough to encounter one, it might run. It might run a couple hundred yards or it might run over the Boulder Batholith and into the sunset. I don't get to control that, and I don't get to know. And there-in lies just one difference between what we typically mean when we talk about fair-chase and what we mean when we don't. I would argue it is an important distinction.
http://outdoorchannel.com/article.aspx?id=22835&articletype=article&key=nugent-takes-py-to-task&p=wc
Uncle Ted has a problem with P & Y, the "demonization" of high-fence operations, and the consensus definition of fair-chase. This isn't news and Nugent is low hanging fruit. But considering he has such a large audience and his word is the highest commandment for many, it's worth seeing what his latest rants entail, because surely you'll be hearing them from someone else later.
"The fact is that all scientific studies show that the deer breeders are the victims of failed state game agencies mishandling of bovine TB, CWD, EHD and other real world cervid diseases, not the perpetrators."-Nugent
I wonder what his idol, Fred Bear, would think.
"I see the animal not only as a target but as a living creature with more freedom than I will ever have." -Fred Bear
Freedom in a fence?
I think Steven Rinella has it right. From his book MeatEater
"Certain activities are definitely not fair-chase,such as the pathetic practice of hunting animals inside high-wire fences".
It's a shame that this guy represents hunters to the non-hunting community. He is as much a danger to the future of public lands hunting as any politician out there.
I'm getting off work early today to go look for bear. I don't know if there will be a bear in the gulch I'm gonna hunt. In fact I don't know if a bear will be within ten miles of me. If I'm lucky enough to encounter one, it might run. It might run a couple hundred yards or it might run over the Boulder Batholith and into the sunset. I don't get to control that, and I don't get to know. And there-in lies just one difference between what we typically mean when we talk about fair-chase and what we mean when we don't. I would argue it is an important distinction.
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