I heard stories of people shooting big game - like elk - which have been raised in large pins.
Apparently you call the owners of the ranch, and ask him for a particular size animal. Once the price is agreed on, the animal is removed from the herd, put in another enclosure, and the client comes over and shoots it.
Any feedback would be much appreciate it.
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saeed@ emirates.net.ae
www.accuratereloading.com
Elk, whitetails, and Bison are the most likely to be found in a canned hunt. Some of the hunts are as you have heard and are conducted behind a high fenced enclosure some less that a mile square. As far as I'm concerned, this is as low as poaching at night with a light. There are more of these operations than you would think....no accounting for taste I guess! No offense to you or others on this or the African Forum but I would certainly rather not have an "African Experience" or any other experience if it was behind a fence. IMHO it sure isn't hunting. I really don't wish to start a flame over the fence issue, shooting behind a fence just isn't for me. I guess that's why people like me live in Alaska, lots of opportunity, no fences.
this is not only an American phenomenon. There are a lot of such opportunities here in Europe too. In each number of the hunting magazines there are a lot of such hunt on capital game as boar or deer. Prices are ot quite modest.
But I hesitate to call it hunting: it�s nothing but shooting ranges with living targets. I share the disgust uttered by the other posters in this thread.
Best regards,
Fritz
It's a great deal for the farm, as they get top dollar for the animals, which would be slaughtered for venison otherwise.
DP
As far as ungulates, they are considered table fare for slaughter, whether by a hammer to the head at a packing plant or by bullet out in the field. Although legal to kill them in whatever manner, this doesn't mean that anyone seriously considers shooting a pre-selected individual within a small enclosure to be "hunting".
That said some of the operations will allow animals to be shot in the field and others shot them right in the stock yard. No one in the right mind would consider these hunts though. The one thing that does bother me about some of the operations today particularily with bison is that they try and make it out to be somekind of reliving of a bygone era. I mean they tell you stories about how the bison were important to the indians and they dress you up in either indian or pioneer clothing and take you out to shoot an animal on a 50 acre parcel. There is a place like this not too far from my farm here in Iowa. I find these operations to be disturbing to say the least. What is the most disturbing isn't the farmer it is the individuals that this is catered to. I mean why would anyone dress up in a loin clothe and war paint to go shoot a bison in plain view of a small town about a 1/2 mile away. You can also see the road and the farm house which are only about 100 - 200 yards away.
Kent
A friend of mine went to Tioga Farm in PA a while back to hunt the elusive 'wild boar'. As an ex infantry officer he grew suspicious as the guide walked him in a big loop over and over agin for a few hours in the am. Finally the guide disappeared and in the same direction the 'wild boar' came running on by.
I have heard similar stories about this place from a lot of guys.
The 'wild boar' and mouflon ram are reffered to as brooklyn sheep and pigs around here. Alot of these city folk (not all) do a good part of theri big game hunting at these places.
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www.rifleshooter.com
Save a plant, shoot a deer!
We have free roaming herds(bison) here in Alaska but they are draw hunts. The permits are very limited and highly coveted. NO FENCES!
Joe
They charge an extra premium to try and "help" you find it. They tell you, "we see him near here at the same time every day", so being at the right spot at the right time is important (you wouldn't want to be late when they release him).
Kent
Steve H
Come slaughter a tame Sask whietail at 50 yards, for only $4 GRAND US DOLLARS.
BANG A FEED BUCKET, AND THEY COME RUNNIN'
[This message has been edited by Pa.Frank (edited 02-01-2002).]
UNTIL ALL THE REAL HUNTERS started busting on him about his hunting trip to the PETTING ZOO
He never said another word, the picture on his desk disappeared
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Don't tread on me!
Pennsylvania Frank
The link did not work, I will try to fix it:
http://www.saskdeer.com/trophy/
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www.rifleshooter.com
Save a plant, shoot a deer!
A couple years ago a guide/outfitter was guiding a client in the area my Dad has a ranch. Each day on the way to the bush to hunt moose this client would see big bull bison in the fields. He decided he wanted to shoot one, so the guide/outfitter approached one of the ranches in the area. For a large wad of dough the rancher let the outfitter's client shoot a large bull, in the paddock while it was getting grained. They then took the tractor and drug the bull out to the bush so the "hunter" could get a picture that would allow him to tell all his buddies it was shot in the wild!
Everyone's got a story like this it seems. Personally I just don't get it.
Canuck
Anyway, I guess my only point is that it happens pretty much everywhere.
Canuck
He bought a bison for meat, and rather than have the packing house kill it he shot and quartered it, put it all in the back of his truck then drove it to the meat packing house. However he makes no bones about the fact that this wasn't hunting, this was butchering.
I don't know if you will find this part amusing or not, I kinda do, but he had a kid help him with the skinning and butchering part, it is a fair bit of work for an animal this large, and the kid said he would help him do the whole thing for free....... If my bro took a picture of him posing with the buff- with his bow!
To answer your question, it's becoming rather common. I remember 35 years ago reading about paying to go hunt planted pheasants on a "preserve" and thought it was a dumb idea. Now, it's very common and quite acceptable in the area I live. Unless you have great dogs and access to exceptional private land, you could hunt for days and never see a pheasant. Or, you can go to a "pheasant farm" and have a couple hours of decent action.
In the last ten years the canned whitetail hunting has increased ten-fold. The prices are usually based on how the whitetail scores, and at many places $10,000 won't get you the biggest one on the place, (I've seen some that went for nearly 20 grand!)
Past couple year "guaranteed" elk hunts are springing up. People apparently tire of spending a couple grand for a western state elk hunt where success rate is marginal. So there's several dozens (hundreds?) of places where you can buy an elk. Price is based on size. You can find these hunts from Florida to Saskatchawan (sp?).
Right or wrong, like it or not, I think we will see more of this here in North America. As pressure increases on public land, as more private land gets leased up by big hunting outfitters, as cheap/good hunting becomes harder and harder for the "average hunter" to obtain, the alternative will become this type of "hunt".
I'm not saying I'm a proponent of it, but that in a certain sense it's inevitable. Just as the hunting of 1955 was different from the hunting of 1890, the hunting of 2005 will be different from the hunting of 1955. IMHO
How they die is irrelevant. Slaughter houses are infamous for poor slaughters, using sledges, and 22 short, or cutting the animals up, before they have died.
Having people nail them with high powered rifles seems much more humane to me, if it's not hunting, that's ok.
Much like the game farms in Africa, it's nice that the raising of the animals is so profitable, that the elimenation of the spieces doesn't occur.
I'm all for keeping game, and shooting a few, to pay for the rest.
The oldest are the ones everyone wants for trophies, so they lead a full life, and die a bit early, but it's still better then being eaten by a lion, or a predator.
It also preserves the value of the land, and makes keeping large amounts of wilderness areas for game, rather then farming, or whatever.
It seems to me, that if you don't want to kill game that way, fine. But if you do, you provide revenue to the land owner, preserve the spieces, and get a nice bit of meat to eat.
I'd be inclined to ask one of these ranches to kill the animal for me, and cut it up, so I could have fresh venision.
gs
Hunting requires one set of ethics (fair chase, etc), farming another (humane husbandry practices etc).
The lines cross, but to shoot a farm animal and pretend it is hunting sucks. I have nothing against selling farmed buffalo "at the end of the barrel". As a matter of fact, I think it is a great way for people to reduce their food bill, as well as improving their diet. I ran a pay-lake trout farm for a while. Very few, if any, people had a problem with us selling our trout "at the end of a line". Lot's of grand-pa's taking trophy pictures of the grandkids with their first fish, though.
But those people shoot the yearling bulls or cows, not the $7500 "trophy" bulls.
I think what makes it the hardest to swallow is that if someone is willing to pay $10,000 for a trophy, that fee could be used to improve enough habitat to raise another trophy like that, every year, for decades to come. Which is what happens when trophy sheep tags are sold, etc. Admittedly, that's like shooting fish in a barrel, sometimes, too. But at least it is used to benefit the species.
The "canned" shoot is BASED on deception, and no good comes from it, for anyone. A canned hunt, typically, is only to obtain bragging rights, pictures, and a mount. It's not about food, or the experience of hunting, learning woodmanship, pitting your skill against the animal. It is an incomplete experience. JMO, Dutch.
Where are you going to find trophy class bison? I mean in quantities that we can hunt. The odds are almost the same as winning a lottery with regard to drawing tags in Utah or Alaska!
Now I personally have no problem with people shooting animals in an open field. I don't personally feel that shooting them in the feed lot is such great thing though. My biggest issue with this whole business is that these animals which have been bred and fed out specifically for record size are then considered by B&C and SCI for entering into the record books. I think this practice should not happen.
To all of you that say it is not fair chase because there is a fence around that 1000 acre field. You guys had better not hunt in Missouri, Iowa, South Dakota, Illionis, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, etc, etc, etc. We white people put up fences a long time ago. I don't think I have ever shot a deer that wasn't in a field that didn't have somekinda fence around it. As far as feeding the deer goes. Those damned deer each several acres of my corn ever year! I wish the deer didn't but they do.
Kent
As far as shooting other heavily controlled animals, like bison, I have to say that first, there are no free-ranging bison herds anywhere, including the bison here in Alaska...bison are animals that are with few exceptions private property and whether they are owned by the state or by a private individual they are extensively managed: someone knows where they are, how many there are, how many calves were dropped in the spring, and, utimately, someone will determine how many they will allow to be shot and how many will be used for looking at. I have shot a bison that was private property, and I both liked the experience and look forward to shooting my next bison. Is it a hunt? Of course not. But I like eating bison and I respect the animal enough to want to be as close to the animal as I can get..I am embarrassed to buy bison meat at the store (but I do it) and I think it is quaint to see people buy buffalo-burgers. And for those who have shot a bison and put your hands on its foot-long jet-black hair when it still had blood running out of it nose, only they know how truely great the beast is... But if you want to shoot a bison, you are going to have to sacrafice this free-range fair-chase ethic, because free-range fair-chase bison hunting does not exist and has not existed since they stopped migrating from North Dakota to Texas. Whether you shoot bison as they leave Yellowstone, or as they feed on some farmers pasture out of Delta Junction, or as they feed in short grass praire on someone's ranch in Wyoming, there is really no difference...they are all managed and protected until you shoot...
I have to say that shooting caribou here in Alaksa, something that I like to do because I like eating caribou and I like being out on the tundra, is nothing like true hunting and is really just shooting....and there are no fences involved...shooting caribou is no more diffecult than shooting one of those big private ranch elk in New Mexico. You don't need a fence for hunts to be canned. There is a reason why outfitters here can truely claim 100% success on caribou. But do I hold it against a person when they feel proud that they shot a nice bull: hell no. I am happy for them and I will be proud with them in their success. Like with the bison, I simply make a mental and emotional distinction between situations that have a greater degree of predicted success, and situations that afford a lesser degree of predicted success. There are many examples of animals that are not confined
within high fenced areas that are shot with a high degree of success being certain. I would classify these animals as being harvested or collected, and not hunted. And it has nothing to do with the presence or absence of a fence and has everything to do with the value that the killer places on the animal killed and the circulstance under which it was killed. As long as it is legal, I think we should not be too judgemental of what others do. And if people want to pass judgement on what others do legally, then I think they should stop pretending and just send their money to PETA, and be done with it. As for me, I am a preditor...if the only elk I could legally shoot was one in a pen, then I would be faced with the option of not shooting elk and start eating more wheat, or shoot the penned elk. I am not faced with those options so I can hunt cow elk in an unfenced but heavily managed strip of land in Wyoming (or elsewhere) where the resident herd of elk provide me an extemely high probably if success on a five day shoot.
In the end I am a preditor. Some of you are taking such a high moral ground that it might be best if you stopped eating meat altogether and joined PETA.
Robert
Very well put!!
The bison I shot last year took me 10 days of hunting to find and get a shot at, and was 42 km from where you could get your truck. No fences, no nothing...just a pile of wilderness.
FWIW, Canuck
Kent
But I do not see the benefit gained in making an anology between using prostitutes and shooting heavily managed animals....we can all start making divisive classifications...the difference between people who use bow and arrows and those who use rifles...or those who use outfitters and guides and those that are competent enough to find their own animals...it could legitmately be argued that anyone who pays money to a guide/outfitter is no different than the guy who pays money to a prostitute...I do not see the benefit in name-calling...Anyone who has hunted seriously knows that a good guide/outfitter is worth his or her weight in gold. I have hunted some the best hunting grounds in the world, including Africa, the western United States, and Alaska where my home is right now, and I will continue doing so until I can no longer... some of these experiences, for all types of reasons, were exciting and some were not and some were hard and some were easy but none of these experiences are similar to prostitution...(anyway, you make prostitution sound like a bad thing
Canuck: I know there are various herds of bison across North America and I believe there are various degrees of what constitutes "free-ranging" anything, including bison. I have seen on more than one occassion the bison there in parts of British Columbia when I am driving through and around your wonderful province and I have seen some of the bison over in the lower (northern) reaches of the Peace River east of Highlevel, Alberta. Your bison and the Wood buffalo over in Alberta are truely huge, magnificent beasts. And I covent them! And I am certain, as you described, that they are diffecult to obtain. How did you get yours out? Horse/mule?
Enough of my rambling.
Robert