thatsjet
Well-known member
For background, I'm a new hunter. I want to be successful. I want to bring home meat. I'm also grappling with what it looks like to chase game in a way that's fair and honest.
I imagine when man first started hunting, his tools were rocks and sticks. Then he figured out how to throw rocks with slings. Big upgrade. Less "fair" for the animal but survival is a good thing.
Next he developed arrows and bows. More success. Less fair for the animals. Even less starvation for man. Good? Yes, I think so.
Next we built rifles and were able to stalk and shoot from hundreds of yards. Quicker kill. Even more success. Whole family gets to eat. Survival is good.
Fast forward to today we have scopes, camo, attractant, calls, thermal imaging, OnX maps, trucks, campers, etc. Who decides which of these new advancements is not "fair?"
My point is this: every new advancement is a tool we didn't have before that helped us be more successful. The end game is still meat and survival. Why are newer tools considered bad and unfair? Wasn't each step more"unfair" than the last?
I imagine when man first started hunting, his tools were rocks and sticks. Then he figured out how to throw rocks with slings. Big upgrade. Less "fair" for the animal but survival is a good thing.
Next he developed arrows and bows. More success. Less fair for the animals. Even less starvation for man. Good? Yes, I think so.
Next we built rifles and were able to stalk and shoot from hundreds of yards. Quicker kill. Even more success. Whole family gets to eat. Survival is good.
Fast forward to today we have scopes, camo, attractant, calls, thermal imaging, OnX maps, trucks, campers, etc. Who decides which of these new advancements is not "fair?"
My point is this: every new advancement is a tool we didn't have before that helped us be more successful. The end game is still meat and survival. Why are newer tools considered bad and unfair? Wasn't each step more"unfair" than the last?
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