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Thursday, September 27, 2012

The Wei Chi of Hunting Morality



Remember this: Morality is not Absolute.

After reading several books, articles, an online commentary wars, the subject of hunter morality wept and bled through my eyeballs into my brainpan; one conversation to another.

This interested me. How proponents of the non-hunter regime in offense attacked, while defensive hunters fired back. To show, with myself as the example though humorous, these conversations I thought were morally lacking based on the behavior and content. Nor do I want to sit long on the mountain in judgment of those below. Falls from that height are quick, abrupt and deadly.

At any point in my conversation on this topic, I have decided most ideals on both parts are treated as blanket ideals. No matter what the individual believes, it's applied to all regardless of innocence or guilt. Any argumentative conversation over the morals of hunting would fall back on whatever defining description that is held in the minds of the ones doing the fighting. There would not be a compromise or resolution.  It is not reverence of animal life or the cause. It’s who wins. If a non-hunter can trump a hunter, then the belief they are a better survivor than the other would be exploited. If that is the case, the hunter is a poor choice to consider and vice versa.

I do not use the term anti-hunter because this group maintains unused latent hunting skills. They just don’t choose to hunt wildlife. Local food is gathered  via the internet and grocery store. Hunters kill wild game for food , recreation, teaching morals and values to offspring, and ecological maintenance much like other animals. Non-hunters are either vegan or have others butcher the animals in an undisclosed location in another state or country far removed from the true reality, but given different communal behaviors share some of the same endeavors but in different ways.

The word used to characterize people’s feelings was termed simply ambivalence. Ambivalence is repulsion and attraction toward some person, object, or act. The article mentioned that the sport of hunting for recreation was the most offensive to groups that questioned the irreverence for life on the part of the hunter. This I find questionable. Even though it's for recreation, you can still utilize hunting without isolating it down to one definable term. Given how wars are waged, finding what one would consider another’s weak spot is the place to aim first. When this is done, it seeks to undermine or invalidate the act itself.

In these arguments, topics are anchored with little more than one or two points of disdain and basis for concrete support. I find that its not the actual act of hunting that upsets most people, but the way a select few individuals express the emotions and physicality after the hunt ends  through public media, especially in the case of recreation. Some hunters have a perceived cavalier attitude to taking life. The act goes from life necessity to a privilege, and this behavior can be taken as a form of conquer and not giving the sentient being or animal mutual respect in life to death.

If proponents of hunting base all their arguments on the term sport and recreation, the limited field of view should be an embarrassment against their logical mental processing abilities. If non-hunters were to win a legal battle based on a term, then that would indicate how low are society has sunk. Winning verbal battles through manipulation of word play and not exemplary problem-solving interactions is a travesty.

As for the argument for logical supremacy that screams human arrogance; Nature is not logical or even predictable sometimes, but the need to control everything from a human standpoint is a parody of errors, germinating out of human thinking and behavior. Clearly, if one is wanting to be the winner of such a battle then the reasons behind the exchange are not moral or noble.

If someone complains they are disappointed in responses from outside sources on the morals or ethics of hunting, would need to remove the burden of responsibility off of an outside source. Then look to ones own sense of values. If and when you look to someone else for guidance on an internal struggle would be a sad day in human nature, for you do not have that well defined code ingrained into your being. If you falter in your beliefs, they weren’t that strong to start with. Your beliefs are ripe for picking when a stronger more charismatic types comes to brainwash you with thought reform. You lose your sense of self and the world around you. Morals and values, unless strictly defined by a society, are not absolute. They change with the situation. To live so rigidly in the defining parameters would surely choke a man. You can have a moral, value, or way of life but, two different individuals have their set perception of how those morals, values or way of life should be defined.

Using hunting as a form of aggression therapy to temper members of society that are already cramped is one way governments can allow an outlet for living in too rigid a lifestyle. Otherwise, governments would have to devise a murderous way to monitor species population in the most impersonal way. It would be like a slaughter house, except the body would be downed in an area with little regard for reverence, studied, then cast aside. Albeit an extreme scenario, there are other options on the outcome.

How can a non-hunter morally think this is having reverence for life, either if they are producing a situation that brings it about? It would be no more than population control.

The article also mentioned the core of the problem of hunting morals was the conundrum of hunting, having a reverence for nature and life, but killing the animal the hunter stalks. One argument for why this seems to be hard to approach is quite simple. It’s a closed remark that doesn’t take into consideration the other necessary parts of the psyche of a hunter that is rooted in Nature or the act itself. It is stated in a way or what you would comprehend as the hunter being excluded from the ecological system that he or she was born into. With this exclusion one would imagine that the hunter has no right to meddle in the life of a natural born animal of that system.

People already accept they are separated by civilization stress this point subconsciously or openly. Being civilized means casting away what they would call back in the day being a savage, even though civilization puts you in a different artificial landscape that mimics Nature but falls short of glory. The conundrum is not a contradiction based on the fact it is an inborn requirement passed down from your ancestors. To deny that would lower all those things evolutionary wise your ancestors suffered to get their DNA to you or you as a human being accept your genetic histories and move away from it though transcendence.

Given that to condemn one individual for deciding a different path, when two or more are offered, is blatantly irreverent to the other individual life. I find this a lot in human to human contact. There is a mutual discord for individuals against one another when a clash of what is compared to be based in morals or upbringing from infancy. Its easy for one individual to find fault with another and thus condemn them as irrelevant and not worth wasting time on. Throughout history some groups have eradicated cultures or ethnic groups for this difference of credence.

To catch one up to speed you need to understand the lingo in brief. When members of a society can separate right from wrong legally, religiously, or by free thought into respective categories this is called morality. These beliefs or teachings are what society dictates would constitute “a good life.” Any idea against this is amoral. Ethics addresses questions of morality where morality is the glue of moral code. Unawareness of differences toward disbelief in a set of moral principles is considered amorality.

In early civilizations, morals were constructed and defined to avoid disputes and injuries but grew to accommodate the correlation of increasing cultural/traditional melting pots. When considering the crux of hunter/non-hunter stances on the topic of hunting, the ambivalence towards the mode of elimination, gratification, and celebration, is what fuels non-hunter sentiment. This sentiment leads to non-hunters mobilizing against the hunting community to correct or shed light on hunting by pointing out non-hunter ideals, which are different from hunters, as they have a unique set of values in the way of perspective and application.

This could be indicative of amorality on the part of hunter/non-hunter. The difference arises in the way the subject of hunting or taking life is dealt with based on one’s participation. Non-hunters have indicated verbally that hunting, as a set of behaviors, do not encourage the global paradigm shift that is being pushed to a reformed world where there is absolutely no violence. Everything lives in peace and harmony without partaking of other sentient beings as a meal. Predators would be eradicated, reformed, or so closely monitored as to be a shadow of its former self. Predators would have to ask for permission to be a predator; controlled. If non-hunter agendas were followed it would end in global unity on the collective ideals that clearly favor the non-hunter ideology. This is ultimately destructive to some part of the system. There would be no balance.

Biologist contend all social animals have modified their behavior by restraining immediate selfishness in order to improve evolutionary fitness.

Non-hunters consider hunters flawed morally, or as a selfish aggressive member of the species. To implement behavior modification onto the hunter, the non-hunter strives to castrate the hunter into the mirror image of the non-hunter for comfort, security, and control. Non-hunters view the act of hunting as excessive individualism. This view could spell that species cohesion can be undermined and directed globally to an aggressive world view with little regard for pain, suffering or death.

When questioning or conversing on the morality of hunting, one must determine where do the guidelines or laws exist to define the right and wrongs. These laws can be found at local, state, and federal levels. Here at last is a option put forth from government to help define the morals or best yet alleviate the burden. With clear laws, statutes, and self regulating criteria hunters are given the option to make the decision to hunt. Its your decision personally as the individual to pick up a weapon of choice and go forth to dispatch a beast of preference for your consumption.

As humanity’s number grows, wildlife is increasing pushed onto smaller plots of land. Given good breeding season or the imbalance of prey/predator ratio, the government offers the privilege of hunting on private or public lands as a way to take your money in exchange for the hunter to do a job at his cost to help the government control numbers or gather biological information. There is also private individuals that are participating in wildlife/land management for the sake of the ecological system they inhabit as a participating predator.

All of these are rooted in idioms of the self-governing blanket term of morality.

Morally speaking, non-hunters apply what is called tribal morality onto the hunter. This tribal morality is projected onto the hunter by what is defined or perceived as normal for non-hunters. This being arbitrary, flexible, and culturally dependent, as the situation demands.

Hunters are not perceived as entitled to hunt in the non-hunter agenda, therefore are not to be treated according to the same rules. In this case non-hunters wish to enhance their own ideal of what it means to survive and thrive.

Non-hunters adopt the principle of universality. The principle of universality indicates; if an action is right or wrong for one party it should be the same for the other party. This is a selfish view. Those who do not scrape by on the minimal moral level of applying themselves to this standard can’t be taken seriously when they speak of appropriateness of response. No matter what the hunter argues, the non-hunter will blatantly reject, even though there is no need for acceptance of the hunter's individual beliefs on the act of hunting itself.

Reciprocity being an idiom of morality is defined as: to extend a turn for something taken. Hunters in lieu of reciprocity take part in the long and short term planning with governmental agencies of wildlife and habitat to ensure a reliable, renewable ecological life cycle and the supply of essential game through natural propagation of species, etc.

As human life has overpopulated the world along with domesticated animals, wildlife competing mutually, by admission of guilt of all people, has been threatened by slowly dwindling down the landscape of acreage and habitat wildlife need for their life/death cycle. Non-hunters seem to not want to manage populations but seek to embrace an imbalance ecosystem not of Mother Nature’s doing. Also to fuel emotional guilt without proper thought given to what must be done, needs to be done, or even if it is distasteful.

On one hand it could be deception through an attack of guilt and shame on hunter reputation as its questionable per their ethics. If their ethics can be skewered for self serving purposes. It would boil down to priorities and how the hierarchy of importance would be established and acted on. This could be said of special interest groups that are on the side of hunting but not necessarily for its aesthetics. Who among men are selfless? Who are appointed judge and jury on life and Nature? Nature is at best a wild animal held in the crushing grip of man’s populations and his un-natural things.

The hunter and non-hunter are no different from any other animal living in a habitat where food quantity or quality fluctuates unpredictably. Hunters are predators but are empathetic to their prey, where in a living system the concern for prey’s life isn’t given a thought, except to feed a belly on the part of a predator. Non-hunters empathize more with prey. Hunters are domesticated The perception of insecurity when life is messing with them brings prey emotions to the surface. The only difference is seen in the idea that humanity is suppose to be elevated to a status outside of other mammals based on intelligence, which is a gaudy arrogance. Also domesticated food supplies should be an acceptable moral choice because it's perceived as less violent, when indeed it is not. It's just undisclosed from public viewing, unless you travel there and see it with your two eyes.

The recurrent theme in wildlife is returning the favor of life and even death. I am swinging toward life on this one. There are several animals species that will starve themselves on partial meals to feed a less fortunate member.

Hunters do maintain the capacity to decide on discriminating choices, when hunting with forethought to the inputs and outputs of a ecological system, while maintaining the system itself. This is based on hunter education through different governmental agencies, self education through any material available, school, being out in the field observing and reporting, and problem solving. This is not based just on stalk, point, shoot, and kill.

Morally, hunters have empathy, reciprocity, partial altruism, cooperation and a sense of fairness as indicators of ethics, as it pertains to the scope of hunting. Hunter moral self-identity and responsibility is grounded in the keen sense to revere life by letting the hunter take part in the natural life cycles. It is based where humans are the equal to other predators with the innate right to be as a hunter is. Hunters do not find necessary to deprive wildlife of its natural state, life/death cycles, for free will but attempt to encourage it and not treat it as a domesticated pet.

Moral code on the individual level is assumed to be innate. This being the aesthetics and thus moral choice . Moral codes are coercive and are promptly and clearly indicative of human politics. Moral code is usually learned in infancy as a religious proverb that differs from culture to culture with varying importance on situations to be considered. Moral codes are founded on emotional instinct and intuition that were selected in the past because they aided in survival and reproduction.

Non-hunters do not see hunting as an aid to survival. Alternative food sources are readily available and acceptable to them. Non-hunters shouldn't undermine or bring hunters into a world where humans have elevated themselves to a fantasy of enlightenment. Hunters do not want to eliminate the deep seated traditional urges of primal rights, as human civilization after great strides in all arenas, has crumpled. Hunters individually and personally find the profane in nature for themselves without being spoon fed what someone else projects it should be. They don’t need gurus. Hunters are being without the shackles of responsibility or expectations of a society that makes life the unlivable struggle it has become. Hunters prefer the natural state of human survival and not the artificial landscape that humanity has built for itself and moves around in daily.

When values are addressed, values approach how individuals and groups understand how, why, and to what degree the those participating should value things. An individual‘s values may be dictated or assimilated after birth depending on the family or community. This can change over time as the individual moves from one communal influence to another, trying on different identities until they find themselves. Some never find themselves, because in the osmotic form are shattered pieces of different perspective on habits.

Ethical dilemmas are pointed out by non-hunters because its based on their social construct, which doesn’t necessarily exist, but is all to real to them.

A person that lived could say I have a few more things to do before I die.  I’m satisfied where I stand.
Hunters do not wish to transcend to an illusionary sense of omnipotence, where life cycles are altered for human politics. Hunters merely wish to take their rightful place as part of the silent conversation of the ecological life cycle. Hunters want to be much like a dog. A dog just wants to be a dog he strives for nothing else. If he did, he would be mutually as unhappy as humans are today by having placed to many artificial burdens.

Besides, individuals are on different paths, if life circles back to the same appointed spot, then so be it.
Existing in a majestic or mundane place, the wonder of a much earlier world still plays itself out in a nature state. You realize how small and insignificant you are and your imagination is uncovered as reality slaps you in the back for all the human diatribes that have been spoken to you or taught; the hunter reflects. Concerns of life and death are relegated to the trunk after responsibility and pursing the illusionary American dream.

Hunting shows you, for those that take that path in life, even if momentarily, the mundane and the profane.
On one hand, non-hunters empathize on the perceived violent death of the game animal by the hunter. Then again, that same game animal could suffer death at the mouth of a predator animal in the life/death cycle. This would seem more ideal because it is deemed a part of nature. In this mentality, humanity is separated out like an interloping species that doesn’t necessarily belong or having a relegated influence on the life cycles themselves.

Man casts man out of Nature. Instead of man being a part of nature, he is no more than a tourist of his own life cycle. Man is a detached being  in itself  and is not considered sentient but alien.

Years have past on man’s descent from Nature. As a creature that is known for conquering, controlling, and devastating Nature, man to some extremes has excised himself from early man primal lineage. Latent instincts in a hunter to get back to Nature and her cycles calls.

Non-hunters who want one unified love do not understand the righteous indignation from meddling in Mother Nature’s affairs.

Non hunter imply and cite ethical dilemmas in an attempt to refute the ethical law-based governmental system that subjugates the complete burden of morality’s question on the sport of hunting, as well as the world view that encompasses it.

This can take the form of a collective militant advance on questioning or manipulating law by feeding the super ego via the Hero complex. Most endeavors end in the insult to the hunting community, revision of laws or respective an avoidable deaths of the very animal species they purport to revere and protect. If you have done nothing but eventuate the death of an animal, how is it different? This could be rooted in intention.
This is all revolving around human politics and not morals because individuals can make a choice on what they believe is right or wrong, then act accordingly.

Morally, hunters do sacrifice self-interest in the service of a greater good every time they plant food for wildlife, decided not to shoot that buck and let him grow, breed, monitor wildlife for disease or changes in populations, offer financing and jobs to others, plant trees, raise wild game and turn them loose. Or follow the laws set down for conservation and ecology. The list is much longer than you think. It's getting credit for your endeavors that fall short. Otherwise immorally, they could say no to all of the above and wait till the last piece of dirt is covered by concrete. Hunters go far beyond prudence. They are looking out for the mutual benefit of ecological systems and those sentient beings living within them. Hunters don’t have obligations, they take on obligations to the ecological system and have a conscience about it which validates moral meaning at least to the individual, even if it is misunderstood by a non-hunter.

Policing an individual's behavior, when the hunter is minding all of the legal laws, is left up to the hunter himself and what he can live with. One of the greater questions in life a person can ask is: Can you live with what you have done?

To truly demonstrate humanity at its best would be for both sides to think of the things they have in common and build a compromise from there. The two differing world views can be compatible. Both sides can find points of compromise and attrition to those that are problematic and journey to a livable accord.

Even as the battle rages on in the tribal realms of defining morality for hunters and non-hunters, a new point of struggle lays in territorial morality with questions of public lands, hunters rights, and the political landscapes the conversations exist on.

What is the moral thing to do? Does anyone really know?


Written by: W Harley Bloodworth
                  Angelia Y Larrimore

Note: It was some pau wau on this topic, I tell you.

~Courtesy of the AOFH~

Does Hunting Need To Be Reformed?



Remember this: Captialism and Hunting are Symbiotic; not the same concept.

Death will never be removed from the making of our food. As the biological system cycles it takes energy to move it, with gains and losses, before renewal. The cycle continues non-stop. To stop is to initiate death but even death is not final for it gives life.

I was reading an essay called Restoring The Older Knowledge by Ted Kerasote from the book, A Hunter’s Heart: Honest: Essays on Blood Sport collected by David Petersen. The question posed as stated, “Is hunting worth reforming?”

So many questions, so little elaboration. I jest.

I looked up the word “worth” as it was the defining word glaring at me angrily from the question. I find that most people, when giving crucial energy for a thoughtful meditation on anything, are ready to give the ax or pardon to use this word as a measurement stick. The Romans just used thumbs up or down. I don’t know if there was a sideways or even a high five but that’s for conjecture.

My constant companion, the Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary and Thesaurus, stated the meaning as ‘the value of something measured by its qualities.’

As I closed my dictionary, I pondered ever so slightly on what one would pluck out of the mind in words on what those qualities were? What were the peculiar and essential characters? The Nature, ironically, of that spoken word? Better yet, what were its negative attributes that pissed people off?

I thought maybe it wasn’t Hunting itself but the metal the person was made of. People are tempered in different ways given time, quality, and one’s humanity even if well hidden.

I was reading an article called Bear Down: A Field & Stream Adventure on Prince of Wales Island by Steven Rinella. I add this because it was the most recent example of exemplary behavior on the part of a friend and hunter to another person as an act of reform; even if it was on past experience or what people would call a bad hunt. After realizing this, Rinella sets out to reform the previous experience in his friend’s mind that could have possibility marred his outlook on certain categories of hunting and dissuade him from branching out toward becoming a well rounded hunting individual.

Facilitating and renewing his friend’s confidence on the Nature of Hunting to me was a noble act even though some people take to being too humble. Credit to hunting, the individual or something else? Whatever that may be, friendship and hunting benefited in a positive light. Couldn’t this be a positive force across the landscape of hunting itself? Can not hunters find their own sense of decorum and act accordingly? If the individual could cast positive qualities to bring out the very best in others, and the endeavor of hunting, could one potentially reform a negative to a positive position for his fellow hunter both publicly and privately? Would this not be such a quality as hunting needs? Where I come from its called, “Doing right by.” I believe it’s a doable possibility. After consideration, I thought of more definitive terms used to describe hunting.

Even the word sport is negative in its description. Here it might be applied to multi-opposing sides engaging in some combat, game, or test to decide who is the better individual. Some would take it as victor versus loser.

When considering the other words that drive the context of hunting we find recreational situated in the adjectives. Recreation-wise, hunting is an endeavor that give an individual a refreshment of strength or spirit after the work done. Recreation is by far a negative term. In the media and social circles, it is flung around with much disdain to prove someone else’s point even given that the word itself is taken out of context for argumentative gains. This doesn’t necessarily mean that one goes out to discriminate or insult the ideals of hunting for selfish reasons.

In reading, I had to argue the point individual hunters do not ignore, question, or deny the character of its members. If it’s a high profile hunter is shaking his tool at the Establishment, of course he should be questioned on his behavior.

Hunters as a group are not omnipotent with the ability to monitor all of its members for transgressions. This is the same with daily life. Humans aren’t monitored 24/7 for wrong doing. It's left to them to decide on a case per case basis how they carry themselves as citizens of a society, in private or public situations. If they get caught that is a different matter but to apply this behavior as a characteristic solely to hunting is a fallacy. It can be applied to different areas of daily life. To state it is a denial sounds cumulative. If you’re looking at the overall landscape this could be considered true. On the individual level it is not. Another point that was brought up was the appropriate behavior towards wildlife.

One should question appropriate behavior towards animals when exercising the right and privilege to hunt. I remember working at a veterinary hospital where we took wildlife in. Most people weren’t aware of appropriate behavior. Well meaning citizens would remove them from their habitat with no forethought of how the animals were going to be fed, how it felt about being ripped up from its surroundings, or even if it thought someone was doing them a good turn. How is this any contradictory to the same behavior? Either way, I have seen perfectly good wild animals die because of this behavior. This is usually a slow gruesome death. They starve, for lack of food, abandoned without learning how to be wild, or domesticated in a refuge.

When laid out in comparison the acts may look different but the outcome will be the same. Something will suffer for it or die.

Again there is life. Should one not look toward the bright star that shines rather than the darkened places? Darkened places eventually see the rays of illumination even if it is briefly.

My personal experiences have over the years brought me to an understanding on that which moves through the body and mind. I like to refer to it as Essence or Soul. There is something significant in the body of an animal when it is alive. It may not have higher mental faculties as defined by man but still something profane lies within the makings of that which we chase. This is realized by awareness, sight, contact, and familiarity.

When you have your hands on something that is alive you know it's there and can enjoy the fact that you know it's aware of your presence; see the recognition it perceives through your contact by touching it without harm. It is a wonderful feeling. Whether the wild knows this is a mute issue. At that point it is all about you and your feelings where human contact with wildlife is evident. There is no loss only gain even if psychological on the part of the human.

In that moment, you don’t have the burden of responsibility. The animal even though it may be untrusting could be imprinted with the idea that there is no threat from the human. How this affects the animal later depends on how long the contact goes on and the quality of the contact. Many a wild animal has been spoilt by this, but equally have benefited.

Overall, it’s the connection you made to the animal while alive that lingers. On a different landscape, when hunting the outcome is different.

As you hunt, you may be several feet away and quite disconnected from the energy moving through the body of a living creature where there is death forth coming. Once you initiate the death note of the animal when you walk over, unless it doesn’t die suddenly, as this brings about suffering, there is no more energy left of it to be considered alive; warm and departed. There is a feeling of loss and grief. Even though this is momentary, it exists and is a milestone in reverence for the life because it meant something to you. The burden of responsibility of its death doesn’t become as empty as the body after the Essences leaves it. It's not just a bag of bones. Where does this stand in the way of hunters behaving badly?

Debasing hunter ethics doesn’t take a village. It only takes several well positioned individuals that make bad decisions in situations that could eventuate in a public outcry against the ritual itself. I reiterate the words bad decisions.

If hunters set the image then does it not need an overhaul?

I would say yes. To address others' reasonable outcries, but also to elevate it above the aggressions of non-hunters. More so, as an individual personal sense of pride in what we do. Self reflecting on the act of hunting itself is what motivates hunters to participate in the ritual of hunting. Hunters do not strive to debase the pursuit of food but transverse our inflection of what it means for hunters to be a part of Humanity.

Amongst non-hunters, hunting has become much like the gun shot during hunting season when bears consider it a dinner bell. People that are against the way in which the animal dies as extremists flock to this full of aggression. There is no intention on engaging in a conversation on something they quite frankly care little about. Not that all non-hunters are equal in that respect so this is another commonality that they have with hunters.

I quote Kerasote as saying, “It is often said that hunters hunt to return to a world of origins, simplicity, and honest interaction with nature. But when you look at hunters, especially bow hunters, in the pages of sporting magazines, in the equipment catalogs, and in the woods, they look like a cross between Darth Vader and a commando. If you go to one of the annual trade shows that display new outdoor equipment, a hundred people a day will try to sell you a new hearing aid, a new camouflage pattern, a new scent, cartilages, or bow that will improve your chances of getting game, and too few hunters question the replacement of skill and intuition by gadgets.” (Petersen 288)

After reading this, I thought to myself, the above statement is being confused with capitalism because capitalism is using hunting as another area in which to stick its fingers and make money.

To live man needs money. That is the ugly albatross around our necks and we put it there. Trade shows are capitalist tools to make money for business. Most of the time when you are attending one of these shows, education comes from governmental agencies or non-profits that want to promote Hunting, not merchandise. Merchandise is only a tool or trapping used in hunting, depending on the hunter’s discretion, at using what ever merchandise or new technology he wishes to purchase.

It's not hunting.

A good salesman is only as valuable as his ability to coerce you into believing that what he has is something you can’t live without. Capitalism confuses the Art of Hunting and works as a symbiotic presence that lives off of its host for as long as it can without totally destroying it. Once again, another area that must be clearly defined.

Hunting consists of levels that the individual has to transcend up through to get to the purity of the Art of Hunting, everything else is a trapping.

I personally believe there are activities in hunting that do not make sense. They are no more than games, like one would see at a high school carnival, to get others into participation. By doing this, it is a dishonest means of getting others involved, if it shapes their first impressions of what hunting is.

Shaping a person’s initial impressions should be the top priority in the Art of Hunting itself. Children must take baby steps but you wouldn’t want them to go out and shoot something before their mind can grasp the concept as an adult would. There are ways of handling things and situations; there are ways not to. This should be clearly defined as well. This is mostly left up to the parent, but depending on the adults upbringing, the same bad or good habit, could be passed along quite innocently because that’s how my family has always done it.

I observed hunting never needed reform but the behavior of hunters is worth reforming for the sake of the art and the individual. This essay was probably done around the year 1996, much has changed as some things have stayed the same.

I believe the Art of Hunting can return to the utilitarian, subsistence, and spiritual place that gave it value to start with in cultures, traditions, and society, if not on a group level but more so on an individual level. For hunting to have value, we must reform it back into the specifics of the esteem it was founded on.

Writer credits: Angelia Y. Larrimore

~Couresy of the AOFH~

Women, Art, and a Gun: Proportion and Conformity.






Remember this: Anyone can pick up a pencil and draw a circle. It's the way you interpret and translate that circle that will influence what a person may or may not see.

I have observed in passing conversation, be it by outraged men, is women  utilizing guns not necessarily made for females. These outraged men wondered when someone was going to produce a gun based on the standard of a woman's proportions.

Why do women  not address this issue?

I say to that: The Female Code. Yes, women have a code to understanding everything. Women are always trying to make circumstances better. Men just go with it most of the time, unless it is activism.

If it works, don't fix it is manly motto. One could question quality here, but I am not hen-pecking. If I buy shoes I don't want my feet to hurt, else the shoes will be returned.

I am no gun expert. Just a thinking woman delving into the issue at hand. Common sense would dictate that you should find yourself a gunsmith just like a violinist would find a good luthier.

Let's inspect this further why don't we?

In my research,  I have found that the dimensions on mass produced standard stocks are designed based on the average male size. Most men range in the area of 5ft 6in to 5ft 11in.  I am in the lower quadrant so managing a gun is usually not an issue unless I am in cramped quarters such as a sardine can of a deer stand.

With that being said, let us visit the Art world for a second. If you think you don't have talent and are not endowed with the ability to draw, there is hope.  Everything is based on concept and design. Most people in the art community favor the the Golden Ratio. It brings balance to a design by signifying what is aesthetically pleasing.

When taking a human figure drawing class, you will be instructed that your model can be drawn around a standard scale of proportion. This idea is more geared to drawing consistently. You certainly don't want to draw an eye on the cheek, or the nose on the forehead unless you're being abstract.


 Lets consider the head and body.
As you can see from the nice drawing above, the head is measured into sections. Keep this picture in mind. Every section of this head is measured out for a certain distance from the top to the center of the eye, on to the bottom of the nose ending at the chin. If you draw a line down the center each side will be a mirror of the other in proportion or scale. When you see a nice pencil drawing of an intricate picture with lots of detail, the artist isn't drawing all of that free hand. It's being sections out with a graphing system and each square is basically being copied down to detail with room for nuances. The bigger challenge is making sure you have your shading down with your lights, darks, or middle grays. People only see the finished product in awe and wonder. Let them have it I say. Don't ruin other peoples' good work.
As for the design of the average man: lets look at that.



Here is a drawing of how to proportionately draw the male figure. See how it is also sectioned. Based on these measurements you could design a gun around the man above if he is an average of X amount of men in the national population. When you are thinking in terms of mass production, you want the least amount of output for the most amount of benefit. The manufacturer would design a gun that would be functional with little error for a percentage of the population. If you are a strange little anomaly then you're going to have to get with their program, do without or make some kind of arrangement on your own.

It's the same for clothes. Women go into Superstores to buy standard cut sizes such as 6, 15, 20, 24. Most of the time when you are buying these clothes, you accept the fact they are ill-fitting and never visit a tailor. Shame on you women. Stop buying non-tailored clothes. This is why you lose yourself and your figure. Conforming to fabric instead of it conforming to you. If you're a woman, you don't want to spend your hard earned money on clothes that don't look good and don't fit you. Why would you do the same thing with a lethal weapon when you don't have too? This could get you hurt. It would be like handling a hot pot with no hand protection. Then again, I am thinking Barney Phiff.

I spoke to a lady online who participated in shooting. She stated that she shot a rifle but because of her small petite frame that the gun was gangly in her hands. She was very uncomfortable and this made her not as confident.

If you buy a little black dress, it better fit you well while giving you confidence and doing its job. You buy a gun: it better do the same thing. Boost your confidence and focus so you can do your job, the gun can do its job, and you're not shying away from the social or technical aspect of it. If you're going on a date, you don't want to worry your dress is riding up. No.....

Your gun is your accessory. Wear it well but in this case.....shoot it like you stole it.

I doodle. I do not draw.

Picture disappeared.

I have doddled these pictures. It shows the nine dimensions of the stock of a gun. (Consider here the left handed and right handed aspects which I will not get into. That is for someone endowed in gun shootery more than I am.) All this can be changed for comfort and proper function. If you consider this then your consistency in firing and making your mark can be in the 100% range rather than the 25% range.  The purpose of a gun is to hit your mark. Other than that, you're just looking pretty, feeling secure and toting a gun that is not in action. If it is going to be in action aren't you going to cry when you can't even hit a cold turkey on Thanksgiving Day?

Lets consider women's body shapes. Women can have long torso, short legs or long arms or small hands. Women can be a skinny as a bed sheet or curvy.

If you consider holding a gun such as a pump shotgun, the barrel doesn't play in the comfort of the gun. The barrel could be sawed off. If the stock is too long etc., the distance from the butt of the gun on your shoulder to your grasp on the lever action of the pump could be a considerable distance. Have you ever felt like you were stretching way to much to shoot a gun? Or do you seem to swallow the gun?

If you watch someone shooting an ill-fitting gun it becomes obvious. You can tell by their attitude because its the first thing to go South.  The shooting stance is probably off. They stand like they have a kink in their neck. When the gun discharges it usually hurts them in the shoulder. Bruises ensue.
I also read in one of my ancient library books that if the stock is too short this can position the thumb on the grip to close to the face that the tip of the nose ends up absorbing the recoil. I am sure that has to hurt or be annoying at least.

Shooters tend to conform to standard manufactured guns. The problem this causes is the ability to form bad habits in shooting by over-compensating. When one does get a hold of a gun that is fitted to them it become obvious and the allowances have to be made to get out of the bad habits or the shooting suffers.

A good fitting gun is lost consciously because it allows for you to focus on the task of shooting instead of being self aware that it lies in your hands against your shoulder. The gun itself becomes an extension of you and your actions.

How can one get measured?

There is a tool, in my research I have found that is called a Try-Fit Gun. It works just like the new and improved tailor mannequins.  Tailor mannequins have adjustable ports to allow for different sizes without buying different mannequins based on fit. You can adjust the stock out in the different dimensions for positioning on your body or shoulder. Think of the stock as your hips. Do you want to feel the discomfort of a tight gun girdle? How many times have you put on a pair of blue jeans that looked like you were poured in them only to find you couldn't sit or lift your leg? We've all been there.

One day I went to Bass Pro Shop. I saw the customers grooming through the guns. Some where picking them up and shouldering them. Some were just pointing them out and buying them. I was thinking that is nice but you have to shoot it as well to know if it is the one for you. If you can stand the comfort of holding the gun that doesn't mean you're going to be able to absorb the power behind the blast. Welcome bruises and soreness. Sometimes peoples eyes are bigger than their stomach. I've seen women in videos dressed in bikinis where they shoot a gun and the recoil knocks them in the head. I also read that if the weight of the gun is too light it will 'kick' harder.
Lets get real. People are lazy.

Unless you're really working out, the upper body strength is not there.  On the other hand, as a consumer people want it right now. They don't want to have to wait to have something adjusted or customized unless it is at their leisure. It's the Right Now mentality. Right Now could get you killed.
As credit to men, if a guy tells you that he thinks a particular type of weapon might be too much for you, he might be right. Men tend not to tell women such things unless they know and can gauge your strength and size. I have had several men stand over me like mother hens because they truly did not want me to get hurt. That is how simple it is. It is not always ego. It's actual concern.

They truly do not want you to get hurt. Men will be guilt-ridden because after a while they will think maybe they should have stopped you. After you are wounded or hurt, there is no going back from that. What is done is done.

It's not that men do not want women to participate. They know these guns are not made by a woman's standard size. Deep down they know it can hurt you.

If you're planning on buying a gun, be a good consumer and not a lazy person. Read up on the new additions to guns and what they have to offer. Most companies now will customize a gun for you. If not, find a gunsmith that makes customized rifles or shotguns. Its a doable thing.

As for buying things because they are convenient, maybe you should rethink that because you want your gun to last a lifetime. You can pass it down to your children. That being said, they may need a customized gun of their own. Mind you the price is up to you. It's your vision. It depends on how far you are willing to go with it. One gun can last a person a lifetime with consistent marksmanship.

Written by: W Harley Bloodworth

~Courtesy of the AOFH~





Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Hiring: Personal Tick Picker

From the comedy The Tick



Remember this: Hold your breathe. Don't let that tick get you. Pick for ticks (this could be fun for some people.) You might feel a little romance coming on?


One of the greater horrors you will ever know is that if a tick bites you there is the possiblity it will compromise your ability to eat meat by way of  anaphylaxis. Welcome to the party!

It is a little disconcerting to know that while the average hunter is spot and stalking his quarry in the field over multi-terrain and varying environments, there is a creature the size of the head of a pencil eraser or smaller stalking us. This unassuming assassin is the tick.
The tick's ninja like abilities to lurk on grass or lowlying vegetation to hop a ride on what the tick would consider Disneyland is one part humorous one part not that funny.
Ticks at times form what are called 'tick hot spots'. This is an area in humid moist tree stands where ticks can breed and hatch their young. If you walk though such a place you could have over 50 ticks on you. These baby ticks are really small. I read that ticks can sense the carbon dioxide coming out your mouth when you breathe. Its true what they say: your waste product is another creatures treasure. The tick has its own strategy for hunting you down in the bush.
The tick is on a quest for your blood, who is carrying a microscopic pathogen as a house warming gift from it to you.
That is the scary thing about pathogens. It can take a host, manipulate the host (tick) to get the pathogen to the desired location for best results to do damage.
Why am I on the tick wagon you ask?
After the beagle episode, I thought I had put enough Deep Woods Off on to chase away all living things but while checking later found I had a female tick on my shoulder. I hate ticks. They gross me out. The thought of them poking my skin and inserting a "hypostome" into me while simultaneously sucking my blood and infecting me made me feel a little violated as always.
Hunters worry about bear maulings, charging elk, the buddy shooting them or God forbid a turkey should poke out your eyes on some weird hunting attack. No, its the tick that will bring you to your knees. It probably weighs less than a drop of acid rain.
I felt a slight itch then took a mirror to bat to see what was back there. On my back was a red area the size of a Pringle potato chip lid that had formed a mound. This area looked like it was turning into an abscess. I should have known something was amiss because the night before I had a sudden malaise. I just crawled in the bed with chills and tremors. I slept over twelve hours. Seeing how it was the weekend and spending six hours in the ER with a final tab of more than my life savings, I decided to 'skip that'. I waited until today to go. Did I mention I hate doctors and their offices?

In over a couple of days I have gotten the following symptoms:
  • a cough
  • malaise (translated ~inability to appear alive)
  • transient arthritis
  • my neck area and joints are swollen
  • red area on my shoulder that gets bigger and bigger
  • slight neurological problems
  • Pus-like discharge (yum? not!)
I pretty much need either blood tests or be treated off the cuff for a tickborne disease.
Some of the things a tick can transmit are:
  • Rickettsia
  • Erylichia
  • Tick Paralysis (aka Coon Paralysis)~caused by neurotoxin from Tick spit.
  • Bacteria, Viruses, Protozoas
  • Lyme Disease
  • Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
  • Relapsing fever
  • Tularemia
  • Tick-borne meningoencephalitis
  • Colorado tick fever
  • Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic fever
  • Babesiosis
  • Cytauxzoonosis
  • Candidatus neoehrlichia mikurensis
Just from that list hiring a personal tick picker or getting a monkey as a pet maybe a plus. Getting educated and informed on these diseases with symptoms would help your doctor treat you. Don't get me wrong, I don't want you to be a hypochondriac that sleeps with the Merck Manual of Medical Problems.
This is not a problem that affects humans as we well know.Your four-legged hunting buddy is a target to nor is the wild game you hunt.
One such story was of a hunting dog the owner brought to the animal hospital I worked in.
This hunting dog who had come in seemingly paralyzed could only move his eyes. We searched him for ticks but only found one fat female tick feasting away. We removed this tick, sprayed the dog with flea and tick spray, and gave it medication. By the next day you couldn't tell the dog had symptoms. Usually with pets they show neurological signs because they've been running unsupervised for unknown periods of time.
It would be a good practice to apply some sort of long residual flea and tick control on your hunting dog. Of course this is hard when you have a horde of them. Dogs go anywhere the wildlife go. This being the case, the hunting dog can bring back 'friends' that are not so friendly. By the time you find the passengers, they've already bit you.
You will also have to take into account when you get so excited you pick up your deer or quarry to do the photo-op and the tick gets on you as you are wallowing on this dead animal. Most people don't seem to care about this. Common-sense, get some.

If you decide to remove ticks off yourself, your partner, or your pet don't use your fingers. Use a tweezer. If you have wounds on your hands you could get infected tick blood in your wounds thus infecting yourself. The problem with tick infections is you might get over the symptoms but it will come back to haunt you later. It has been found in research that some dogs previously infected can come down with the symptom of arthritic ambulation (can't walk all that good in layman's terms.)


For more on this dangerous maurauder click below:
http://science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/life/zoology/insects-arachnids/tick3.htm

Mugshots of Ticks, Get to know the Perp:
http://webpages.lincoln.ac.uk/fruedisueli/FR-webpages/parasitology/Ticks/TIK/tick-key/index.htm


Enjoy Your De-Ticking!

Written by: W Harley Bloodworth

~Courtesy of the AOFH~

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Being Taken Seriously Or Not?




Remember this: Maintain your reputation at all times. Don't let anyone drag you down.

Recently, I have been seeing a lot of blogs and posts on the behavior of women, I assume, that hunt. I  thought every once in a while you have people that call out others who are charicatures of the hunting endeavor, male or female.

My mind set was traveling along the lines of differing view points. I asked myself some questions.

Do women want to be taken seriously overall?

I would think the answer to this is yes. Women actually do want to be out in the field with their prospective other, even if they are man handling a gun or not. On the other hand, they might want some me time while the prospective other is out beating the bushes or talking a lot of bat guano with his friends. This is a win-win situation.

People in general like to feel accomplished. Believe it or not. Some women do feel the need to be regarded as the prospective other's rare jewel, instead of shame and regret. Men like to know they have something rare that their buddies don't have or probably never will have. That is one of the underlying tones of trophy hunting. How good a specimen it is and if its rare.

Rarity.
Men will brag on their woman like they would brag on their favorite hunting dog, gun, or truck.
Men are just simple that way.

As for security sake, I asked the question to myself: What if the prospective other was injured, which caused them to be unable to provide? What if there was no prospective other?

Women do not like to worry about the basic necessities of life, such as food and shelter. If the other half of your union, be it legal or not, is down for the count, you certainly want some reassurance  that life can be handled with very little anxiety. If you are by yourself, the last thing you need to be thinking about is how someone is going to circumvent what you have to do to survive.

If a woman ever left a man it was because of anxiety to her thinking.

How does seeing women prostrated on social media in pseudo hunting photos help the cause of women in outdoor sports?

Undoubtedly, it is not helping the role of women to much. It has generated a topic of interest. These pseudo images do generate a lot of merchandise sales for the product, but not necessarily the model.
As for posted photos, it's either going to make you want to be like that, exercise like crazy, or go on an eating binge with ho-hos. There is no way in this lifetime you'll ever look like that without a plan and commitment.

If you put a photo up of a nice looking, mostly naked woman in hunting gear she will be all the craze by men's post. Another woman will view the reaction, then mimic it hoping to get the same result. She will get the same result but not the one she was hoping for. In her mind, she was hoping to find the one. In real time, she's just being objectified like the model in the photo. Unfortunately for her, the only one getting paid is the model.

Posting seductive photos of oneself is zero in your bank account.  You also open yourself up for ridicule, losing someone you could have had a chance with, or total ruination; at least in your mind. On social media, smearing someone can go all the way to the end of Google Planet. That is as far as it gets.

Hunting aside, there are people out there with low moral character. You've made yourself a target for people of low moral character who will stalk you while making you slowly pull your photos out of sight. There is such a thing as negative attention.

Would a woman that hunts want something better for herself? Does the belief the questionable, sleazy redneck is the way to go?

Then again, you can find a person of low moral character wearing a business suit. Trust me when I say, they are on the internet right now googling.There are some people that do take pictures of themselves, but before social media hit, that was something private for yourself.

Is it necessary to show the whole world what your mama gave you?

Sadly, men might comment up and down on a post of  naughty girl pictures. When it comes to their mate they don't feel like sharing, especially with the whole world and their buddies.

As a guy, do I really want ten of my buddies getting a good look at my gal's back or front porches? What if said buddies got the idea to come over while you weren't there?

Male animals fight over females all the time, good breeders or not.

Does a woman want her picture posted up beside a trophy kill? Isn't she the same thing? One more conquest to claim or reminiscence over? Valueless and the topic of some gaggle of men's degrading comments? The butt of someone's jokes that makes others perceive her as less of a human?

Anytime you place a visual out in the public you are inadvertently, unintentionally advertising. Let us get one thing straight though, people do know what they are doing and what will come of it. In this case, do not feel so bad for them when overtly sexual comments ensue. The road travels both ways on this subject. .

The creepy little mind is what connects the dots on what the viewer thinks you're saying even if your message is different from the one they receive. With that being said, I do exclude the more formal sports where tweed is worn (only because tweed is awesome). You don't have to dress in camo all the time given the game you are chasing. We are looking at allowances here because they exist.

If there is a group of people that contend women were not a part of hunting and shooting before, this is a valid statement. (For those that say, this is not true, go visit a museum, that illustrates the idea; a museum where out-of-date reliquaries are left out of mainstream; it is history, not current). Instead of being a by-standers, they are actual participants. There is also within that group, like minded people that feel to maintain a momentum of self-decorum or even self respect, it would be prudent to exercise some kind of restraint when being a role model (even if you don't think you are one or chose to be one) for other women. I can understand arguments ensuing on this subject. People tend to want to do whatever they please, even if it brings them grief at their own hands.

Overall there is an undertone of hunting being under attack, so how one would present themselves to avoid a bad reputation to the outdoor sports, or to oneself, is something you need to take into account. Never make what you are endeavoring to do look bad. If you make it look bad it will reflect poorly on you. I say that, but the Herblock that I am, must ask the tough questions.

You are your own salesman.

I would think it would be the same thing for women. If before in the past other women were not mixed up in the hunting soup, but now you had your chance, why would you do things to make it seem uncomely or a turn off?

Women in hunting want to make strides without setbacks. Once you can overcome the supposed difference in men and women, there can be a camaraderie between the two sexes when out in the field. If that leads into something else that is a little bit stronger than a passing physical infatuation, then so be it. You will not suffer for it. If you take up hunting merely to find a husband or a boyfriend, eventually he will see right through you. You'll be back at the house, as a non-participant or by-stander.

There is also the scenarios where you will be thinking you've found "a live one" only to be disappointed. The person is trolling for someone they can enjoy for the moment or a fantasy.

The bigger question is overall as a group, do women want to be respected for our skill and our respectable position in society? Do we use hunting only as a platform to get a date or a husband?
No one that I know of likes to do something for the sake of nothing. At the same time, one person would be insulted that the strides they make in the global outlook on hunting is degraded by the acts of a handful of misguided souls.

There is a big difference in sharing yourself with one or two people versus sharing yourself with the world.  Even with one or two people, they only glimpse a small fragment of you and not the deeper self of who you are. Non-disclosure can work wonders for your self-esteem.

As a female who hunts, I don't think about this as I get ready to go spend my time in the woods or on stand. I just enjoy myself and let that be a controversy for late night blogging after the hunting is done.

Again do you want to be a person who posts as an activist with words of rage while squirming in your computer chair hoping to get someone to notice your tirade? Do you desire to get in an online altercation or are you just going to do what you do without all that tantrum crap?

Really it boils down to a personal choice. What do you chose to do? Sexual innuendo photo on social media or not?

Do you want to be taken seriously or not? If so, act like it.

Written by: W Harley Bloodworth

~Courtesy of the AOFH~

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Old Injuries, the Spine, and Recoil.








Remember this: This ain't Spinal Tap.

The other night at a meeting of the AOFH, I was sitting down to a nice meal of Venison stew with sweet potatoes, wild rice, and biscuits. Good conversation always makes food taste better along with close friends in small intimate settings. One of the ladies that frequents our little pau wau in the bushes named Mrs. Trish was sitting across from me working her plate over. I asked how things had been since her accident back in 2003.
Mrs. Trish had injured her back which caused her to have a burst fracture of T-12. She said she was doing really well with it. I thought this might be a good time to ask how that was working out for her with shooting a gun.  I wanted to know if it affected her performance, emotionally or physically. Mrs Trish told me that one day while waiting in the stand she took down a buck with a .270 Winchester that belonged to her husband. He was somewhere else in another place hunting as they hunted together. She said she didn't go as often as she use to. I asked why? She said after she shot the buck the adrenaline kicked in and she got down from the stand, called her husband then waited for him to come 'give him poke' to make sure he was finished. Her husband took care of everything while she went up to the house to fix supper. The next morning she got up from bed and realized she was tender in her back area. Taking some medication helped her through the day but two days later her husband took her along again to sit in the stand. She crawled up but noticed that she felt she was struggling up the ladder. When she finally got up to the seat, she was slightly shaking. Thinking she had exerted herself, she started breathing to calm her nerves. After a while this problem seemed to go away. While watching the tree line in this corn field that had been combined she saw some deer come out the woods. She took aim but realized that she started shaking all over to the point she felt a little outside herself. I asked her, "What in the world, Mrs. Trish?" She told me that she thought the recoil from the gun had irritated her back wound. These strange symptoms scared her which prompted her to call Mr. Paul to come get her out the stand because she didn't want to fall. Not undaunted she went to the doctor to get examined and pain medication. Now she pre- and post-medicates before going up in a stand and firing off her husband's gun. She had surmised the shock of the recoil traveling through her body when she shot the rifle had irritated her in some way that she didn't notice until later because her body didn't have time to compensate or get over it. Mrs. Trish told me she loved shooting but at her age and impairments was resolute to use good judgement on the quality instead of the quantity of her hunting and shooting habits. Given her handicaps she was in a reasonably good mood about her future in the sport with her husband offering his support all the way.
That brought up an interesting view of recoil. (Then again Mrs. Trish could have been having a heart attack up in that stand when she realized she was going to get lucky a second time?)
Recoil by definition is the backward momentum of a gun when discharged. You could say the backward movement of the gun equals the forward movement of the bullet and gasses (you might smell or see this when the bullet travels down the barrel and exits the bore or the business end of the gun.) I don't want to get into the physics. If you want to know more about that go on a googling run of your own at your leisure.

There are ways to reduce recoil in your gun:
  • recoil wad
  • hard shot
  • porting
  • powder type
  • mercurial or mechanical reducers
  • stock fit
  • recoil pads
  • action type
*This would be some good subjects to research on if you are interested in the subject of recoil reduction in your gun.*

Some of the issues that can affect your shooting if you have a back injury or other is:
  • Inability to adopt a normal shooting position.
  • Carrying or shooting a heavier or more powerful weapon.
  • Strain or fatigue in the arms and hands.
  • Moving the torso around the pivot of the hips.
  • Lose speed and smoothness.
  • Lower endurance.
  • Performance anxiety
  • disabling yourself for a while
After reviewing this scenario and the possible repercussions it brings, going to the doctor every once in a while and getting your self aligned or even checked could benefit your overall health. It will also make you think more on your decisions as to what type of gun, ammo and how often you shoot.  You may want to go to what some people refer to as a 'lesser gun' but have no shame in it.
Every once in a while, people give the 'big guns' a try but its really not that necessary unless you are truly hunting something that calls for it. There is no need to impress anyone. One well placed bullet from a modest gun can do just as much with less mess than a arm or hand cannon.
In Mrs. Trish case, depending on your ailments, even a little bit of recoil or shock can put you out of commission for X amount of time, so tread carefully. You want to be able to shoot and hunt for many moons, not be laid up in a hospital waiting on surgery or hitting the morphine button.
Never go hunting medicated unless its a medication that doesn't disorient your or compromise your ability to act with common sense or caution. Prescription drugs have a way of altering your thinking ability along with your reaction times. I personally do not want to go hunting with a 'Slow Joe' or a 'Hallucinating Lucy". The last thing you need is to run the bush with your hunting co-pilot and wonder if she's seeing zombies. You might get mistaken for one.
Use common sense if not let your significant other think for you or even your hunting buddy if your mental faculties are termporarily impaired. Also remember its great to go solo hunting but when you're out in the bush accidents happen. Don't go alone if you can. You never know what is around the bend: a broken leg, misfired bullet, a mauling, or snake bite. Be safe not stupid. Egos get people killed everyday.

Written by: W Harley Bloodworth

~Courtesy of the AOFH~


 

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Woodland Management: Wildlfe and Succession Forests


 
 
Remember this: Plan to day. Benefit tomorrow.
 
Lately I have been doing some work on a pine plantation. Pine plantations are stands where the trees are planted in rows. This is beneficial because you can drive down the rows to mow any unwanted underbrush or weed. The purpose here is not to let the underbrush (understory) grow out of hand. The ultimate goal is not to allow it to form into an unkempt forest of succession even though if it is left unattended over the years this could happen. It is a strange comment but sometimes you have to landscape your forest garden for the benefit of the wildlife, bugs, plant flora and enrich the soil itself. It being a habitat in itself managing the pine plantation improved the overall health of the habitat and surrounding areas.
I took a break to sit on a camo five gallon bucket overlooking a soybean field that abutted a cemetary. I was laying in wait reading a book when I got to the section that stated second growth trees and shrubs can grow so tall that it is not feasible or possible for deer to browse on the foliage. The concept here was that these tracts would eventually turn into a climax forest that couldn't support larger herds.
A climax forest or forest succession is a tract of land or forest that develops over a period of time.  Wildlife come and go carrying transient seeds. These seeds start to grow and the variety of plant flora changes with its own set of life sustaining demands. The soil erodes and becomes altered. Weather and climate changes make or destroy life at any given time. There in the ground is the forum for a sort of plant competition where all things start out small but with each passing year the foliage gets taller, thicker, or densier. The reason for this is pioneering species of trees that live in the upperstory sprout understory offspring which eventually replace them or fill in the space until the older tree dies or falls. If this area is not managed to maintain a stead sense of equal balance it will overgrow itself. This will eventuate in large amounts of work to tame it back to a manageable space. You may have some wildlife but not the kind you would see meanadering about.
Even as a hunter or just someone taking a walk, you find times where you stop and look at the bushes and those things unseen and think, "I am not walking into that." No one likes a briar patch. The only creature that likes a briar patch is one that is running from a predator. Even then it depends on who is in hot pursuit. The species mix of trees is constant. Transient wildlife that does come and go will most likely not stay if the browse of their choice is not present. If there is no brush or understory trees for them to feed on they have no reason to be there. They certainly can't climb up a tree unless the animal is a coon or opossum.
The forest or tract of land goes through cycles of varying durations of different factors that affect it in negative and positive ways.
Animals live in these places with insects and pertinent fungus for the same reason humans live where they live. Its basic need. Food, shelter, a place to reproduce, security, a place to hide, and co-exist with other creatures that can add to their benefit or survival. 
People would argue that pine plantations are not that beneficial but it depends on where you put it and how it affects the area.
Does it improve the area or not?
This particular pine plantation was planted on non-abandoned agricultural land. It was a personal choice. Hardwoods were not replaced. When this is done the area usually is a wetland and removing the hardwoods to replace it with pine will dry the area up. At the time of planting there was no habitat or biodiversity loss. Now years before you might could argue that before it was turned to farmland but not now. That time is past.
Now the pine plantation I am working does exists as a wildlife corridor and acts as a buffer for the neighboring natural forest that is a hardwood forest only feet away. There is a healthy contained mix of varying tree species increasing the options for different wildlife that want to dwell in one but feed off the other.
Factoring in the  environmental and ecological impact you will create or affect with a pine plantation is how you manage it.
Management is key: what  you do on it, to it, or around it will affect the land parcel in some way.
Managing a pine stand also bring the beneficial option of not intruding on natural forests for commercial gain. Its the 'other option'. These pine plantations are highly productive and the requirement for a large space of land is low.
This also brings about the point of how you can use a small section of land for maximum production without depleting the ground itself by using what is growing on it to sustain nutrient cycling on a property.
As far as wildlife goes, creatures have enough cover to hide in but without movement being restricted in such a way to make them learn the lay of the land works more as a trap than an escape route.
As a hunter, land owner or coalition of people trying to make the world or your speck a better place, the following should be considered:
  • Develop a management plan.
  • Plant variety and maintenance
  • Site preparation and management
  • Mid rotation management
  • Late rotation management
  • Landscape considerations
  • Harvest Techniques
  • Edge maintenance and consideration
  • Fertilizers and Herbacides
Creatures a pine plantation encourages in short:
  • Cicadidas
  • Rabbits
  • Squirrel
  • Deer
  • Raptor birds
  • Spiders
  • Varying birds
  • Raccoon
  • Snakes
  • Small animals
  • Quail or small game birds 
  • Bear
  • Boar
  • Fox
I was pondering the comments of people on the internet about how hunters do conservation today. How much money they put into the system on licenses and merchandise that feeds back into state governed and maintained public land. Great, I say but what about the little man you don't give credit to that lives across the street from you. You know, the one that disappears each morning, plugging away in his little neck of the woods for wildlife and plants that can't go out and buy things at the store to make their lives a luxury? That is the unsung hero you probably overlook or never know. I thought this was a nice statement but hunters are just as adapt at building and maintaining habitats for the game they pursue. Its nice to see people exchanging tirades but its the rare bird that will show you they are talking the talk and walking the walk. 
People have words but I have words and "actions".
 
As a tool for anyone that would like to get educated on this concept feel free to copy this link and go read something before reading is out of fashion.
 
 
Written by: W Harley Bloodworth
 

~Courtesy of the AOFH~
 

Monday, September 17, 2012

The Mystique of the Whitetail




Remember this: People see deer everywhere even in their dreams.

Since whitetail season has opened on Sept 1, I have thought alot about the mystique of the animal.  The deer can suit itself to the circumstances. Depending on the terrain, the whitetail seems to be able to blend in, being a russet, tawny, pied color markings for the brush areas. When the deer comes out of the hardwood forest, the coat can be beech tree gray. There are deer now showing the albino trait. It can look like a log when it is lying down, or be standing in broomstraw eyeballing you down. Most bucks learn to stay in the tree line while a doe or two makes themselves a very easy target. If you have one buck to eight doe, I guess this would make for a wonderful strategy. Make no mistake, deer especially in herds if they are truly wild have a strategy for giving the hunter a wide berth. Unless they are not paying attention.They have the inate ability to move through brush without making a sound. A hunter can't miss the twig with its snap that sounds like dynamite to your ears.Their legs can look like thin trees or saplings. Everything about the deer is visually deceptive.
Deer in different parts of the country vary in size and weight depending on the availability of nutrients. These nutrients can be wild grown but agriculture and food plot management by the discriminating hunter can supplement any shortage. They eat whatever is seasonal. If you go by weight a buck could be 135-165 lbs down South but up North the weight could be 300 lbs. Does are between 125-160 lbs. When you are hunting them, they don't make for very big targets especially running. If you hog dress one out, you find that you lose a percentage (25%) of what that weight would be in meat because so much goes to bone, entrails, skin, and antlers. Don't be surprised when you go to the wildgame processor and get back much less than what you thought you had: you are not eating the complete deer.

There are about thirty subspecies distributed from Canada to Central America. All of these can overlap and interbreed causing a mixture of varying physcial traits
Because of their adaptability, they can outsmart you unless you're using some high tech gadgetry but its not under heard of for someone to jump a buck. In this day and age, technology has taken all of the challenge out of the hunt.

At one point in their evolution, they were solely diurnal but when the concept of hunting was introduced they become more and more nocturnal in their browsing habits to avoid being killed. In the poor light of nightfall, you may see the ghostly shadow of movement as they weave in and out of the tree line. The deer will walk down the inside of canal ditches to avoid being seen on flat land, hide in briar balls, or sleep beside a barn where farm animals are kept. They will even fall in with a herd of farm animals just to seem like one of the crowd. The browse that they eat can consist of 600 or more different kinds of plant material.

Whitetail are masters of skulking only second to turkey. Bears and cougars are just silent and deadly.
Whitetail do not migrate, which benefits the hunter because the home range can be a square mile. Even if during the breeding season, a buck is looking for does but will add a couple of miles to his roaming area. A buck could have a base camp, if you will, where he will move out but then come back fairly quick. This is a survival mechanism. Go but don't stay gone to long. I have often wondered at this particular rigid philosophy. If the habitat changes then so when the creature.

With this said, looking for game trails is a good habit, especially heavily used game trails. Usually where they feed and where they bed is a short distance. They will take the same path you might cut through the woods but be weary. It can be abandoned just as fast as it is made.Usually you'll see lots of tracks, scat, or the smell of breeding season as homones and urine are cast about. Sometimes in the case of trampling, the current path you have found might change by a couple of hundred yards so walking about to assess the situation or rethink your strategy is a must.Sometimes they just find something a little better to enjoy.

When the breeding season comes you might get a chance because hormones are raging and stupidity or carelessness reigns supreme. While breeding the buck will show himself more out in the open. He'll seek out and clash with other bucks for mating rites. Bucks will walk themselves to death while in the rut. The mating season will see them eat and drink less which puts them in a poor state of health. This could also contribute to their 'slip of the mind' when trying to avoid being shot.
With this being said, a buck can hide right underneath you for the remainder of his days on a square mile of land. He will see you before you see him. He lives there and he knows where you are. I argue again, if you use cameras this will upend your hunting experience to some  degree. Everywhere I look there is a stand, a camera, and a photo. All you have to do is come back, sit and wait.

Whitetails are color-blind but they see motion really well. This probably contributed to the high sales of camo cover to help the hunter be undetectable. As a rule, a buck sometimes ignores a stationary object unless there is a sound or smell that tips him off. A deer can see you blink your eye from 60 yards away. I argue this point now because if you went by television the deer must be acclimated to a person in a tree with little forethought of danger. Being really still then waiting for them to turn their head is something you would really have to remember unconsicously when you are excited about one walking into your sights. Fast or sudden movements will not win you the day.

Their hearing is acute. They can hear your stomach growling, a twig snap, or a click of some metal bumping. Muffling stand parts is essential. You can fool them with rattling or grunt calls which mimic the different sexes or offspring. You would really need to know what that sounds like because you just can't blow your horn an expect them to accept you for another deer.

With these few tidbits being said it is not always an animal that is easy to hunt. I do experience internal conflict on this subject due to the relative ease to kill one now. Agriculture and human population growths have made the whitetail homeland smaller. Sightings are more frequent especially at night when they hang around highways eating the grass off the side of the road. 

Deer that have become less inclined to avoid humans are not much sport because they start to look and act like a tame goat or cow. This makes them lose their mystique. Even though mystique is an illusion it is one worth chasing blindly after.

Written by: W Harley Bloodworth

~Courtesy of the AOFH~