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one of us |
"Here Here" RSY, very good reply and I am with you! I still like to have something to eat after I hunt, not every time I go afield but it does fill my freezer. Most of my hunting in wide open Wyoming is done on less than a 1000 acres, no fences but the game is congregated in certain areas and that is where I hunt. A 1000 or 5000 acres fenced ranch with habitat and places to hide is no different than where I hunt. I doubt anyone runs them into a corner of the fence and shoots them. I hunted RSA on a ranch of 12,000 acres with a 6 foot game fence. I seen many species, including a cow eland, clear that fence or go through it. Like Eltigre said "I don't have to prove my manhood" A clean kill and eating what you shoot is more important to me. I have hunted whitetail on 120 acres of thick brush and had to hunt 4 days to just get a shot. "It's what you make of it"!!!!!!!!! | |||
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one of us |
quote:If I was SHOOTING those fish, this might be a logical argument. Or, if I had to wait for a deer to actually come eat a certain piece of corn, or a certain apple, before I could claim him, maybe I could see your point. Sorry, your logic just doesn't cut it this time. [ 04-20-2003, 03:48: Message edited by: Cold Bore ] | |||
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one of us |
quote:Yes. I won't do it, but it's just farming by another name, and I won't support laws against it. Tom | |||
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I've done it and from that experience, my vote is a definitive NO. | |||
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one of us |
From the looks of the bids on this ebay item... doesn't look like there's too many that are really into it. ![]() http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=3603160913 | |||
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one of us |
Yes. If some one wants to fish in a private pond, chop the head off the chicken or turkey he chooses to eat, or shoot the animal he wants with whatever weapon he wants. I think it should be up to the individual and the land owner. Level of chase, preperation, work, reward and memories of a hunt and if a person even considers a particular experience a hunt should be up to the individual and should be an option. | |||
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one of us |
The real question should be is it ok to own wildlife. And, the answer is no. Therefore, since wildlife cannot (or should not) be owned by anybody, because it is in fact owned by everybody, then fencing wildlife in is wrong. Is it legal to take all the water out of a stream for your own use just because that stream happens to run through your property, so your neighbors downstream are left with nothing? No, it is not. Same principle. If somebody wants a guaranteed "hunt" find a rancher with some cattle and buy one of those. Then feel free to go out there and pretend you are hunting. I bet it would be a lot less than the price of an elk too. [ 04-20-2003, 22:19: Message edited by: Washington Hunter ] | |||
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Yes. It's an issue of property rights, not hunting. | |||
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SO, LEMME get this straight. ANYONE been on one of those "guaranteed" caribou hunts?? How can you guarantee a hunt in THOSE lands. You go up into the REAL wilderness and one way or another they put caribou in front of you, even relocate you to a different camp. it's not too difficult if the timing is right, because they are crossing by you in the hundreds. Is that a "good" type hunt or a "bad" type hunt. curious about the "definitions" | |||
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Aren't most ranches in South Africa high fenced? For those that don't agree with a high fence I figure they have never been and never plan to hunt in South Africa. Don | |||
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No! Mark G is right about hunting turning into a rich man's sport. I'm pretty sure it is not going to take 50yrs to get there. Maybe 15-20yrs most- look what has happened to license fees, average trespass fees, guided hunts and landlocked public ground. Steve [ 04-21-2003, 06:51: Message edited by: stevo ] | |||
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no | |||
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Yes. It doesn't appeal to me but I'm sure it brings certain hunters to the sport that otherwise wouldn't or couldn't participate. | |||
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quote:Hmmm...an interesting point. I'm stuck in the middle on this; all domesticated species were wild at one time. Tom | |||
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Tom, that is true...would you like to see the few species left become domesticated? Why is it that man feels like everything has to be conquered? Wouldn't it be nice for future generations to have wild deer and elk? Without seeing them on every farm all over the country? I don't think they would be all that special and unique like they are now. | |||
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<Armed in Utah> |
NO........get real........if you want to 'shoot' something, go shoot a steel target. OR go 'fair chase' hunt. | ||
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quote:I don't know about this; there are not many wild cows left, except the ones that are just too big to fence in. There are some deer/elk farms already, and it has not done any noticeable harm except for the fact that farming concentrates animals in ways that encourage the spreading of disease. The ranchers who complain about bison spreading brucellosis are avoiding mention of the fact that it was originally a cattle disease and it was ranchers who spread it to bison in the first place. Apparently CWD has been linked to the concentration of elk, also. I dunno. Tom | |||
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