From my friend Tovar Cerulli:
Fair chase hunting: Moral? Ethical? Hunter preference?
We also look at core issues related to the future of hunting such as hunting ethics, hunter
education, the public trust of wildlife, and the North American Model of Wildlife Management.
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Lone Wolf Commands a Following
New York Times article on the first wolf tracked into California:
...Ardent wolf fandom and ire do not surprise Ed Bangs, the federal Fish and Wildlife Service’s
recently retired wolf recovery coordinator. “When wolves come back, one
side says it’s the end of civilization, our children will be dragged
down at the bus stop,” he said. “The other side thinks nature is finally
back in balance and can we all have a group hug now.”
California will see the same divisions, said Mr. Bangs, who in his 30
years in gray wolf management attended hundreds of contentious meetings
with residents, ranchers and environmentalists.
“I like to say wolves are boring,” he said, “but people are fascinating.”
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Wild Hogs and the Role of Hunters
From Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partners "Conservation Field Notes"
http://bcove.me/sm2kkw8v
http://bcove.me/sm2kkw8v
From Wisconsin DNR:
Wild hogs in the woods
Wildlife and agriculture officials take a stand in the mud to ferret out feral pigs from pockets of the Wisconsin countryside.
Kyle LaFond
Feral pigs have gained a foothold in 23 states, including Wisconsin, mostly in Crawford and LaCrosse counties.
From California Fish and Wildlife:
The relationship between California residents and wild pigs could be described as “love/hate.” That
is, hunters love them while everyone else seems to
hate them. Classified as a game mammal in California,
wild pigs provide year-round hunting opportunity.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Montana's wildlife policies raise ethical question
From the Washington Examiner:
Montana is looking to recreational hunters for help in enforcing more of its wildlife management policies, but one regulator worries they are being asked to cross an ethical line in doing so.
The question is whether the state is unwittingly putting those hunters in a fix: Does their new role fall within ethical hunting guidelines or does it reduce them to wildlife management mercenaries whose actions could give hunting a black eye?
That's the concern of Fish, Wildlife and Parks commissioner Ron Moody, who recently questioned whether the agency's policies and proposals are asking hunters disregard what it means to be an ethical hunter.
...The man who wrote the book on ethical and fair-chase hunting, Jim Posewitz, said public perception is very important for hunters. The FWP's use of hunters to enforce wildlife management policies can work, provided the agency uses the right hunters, he said.
FWP should provide training so the hunters used have an understanding of the last century's conservation efforts in North America and also understand that the overall goal is to have sustainable, manageable wildlife populations, he said.
"We need to make sure they're very elite and a very respected group of hunters. We're not sending out assassins or SWAT teams. We are sending out sensitive, trained hunters to handle a very sensitive situation," Posewitz said.
Aasheim said additional hunting training has previously been suggested, but has not been implemented. Currently, the state provides a basic hunter education course and each person who participates in the annual bison hunt receives a 30-minute DVD that discusses ethics and hunting, he said.
Posewitz worked for the FWP for 32 years and founded Orion — The Hunters Institute, an organization that advocates for ethical hunting. More than 600,000 copies of his book, "Beyond Fair Chase: The Ethic and Tradition of Hunting" have been handed out as part of hunter-education programs.
He cited Helena's program to control urban deer as a model of how it can be done right. Each year, the city receives authorization from FWP to kill a number of deer to maintain a manageable density of animals within the city. This year, that number is 220.
"They're not out there liquidating the deer. They're keeping the deer in balance with the carrying capacity of the city, and they're doing an excellent job of that," Posewitz said.
Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/news/2012/01/montanas-wildlife-policies-raise-ethical-question/2123696#ixzz1kIaCnEDb
Friday, January 13, 2012
A Murder at Paradise
From the New York Times By TIMOTHY EGAN
PARKLAND, Wa. — The next time somebody mindlessly bashes a “federal bureaucrat,” as if the term itself were a parasitic disease, remember the bright young woman we said goodbye to here a few days ago: Margaret Anderson, a park ranger in a flag-draped casket.
...The other point worth noting is about how selfless and valuable so many public employees are — especially those who work the parks, forests, deserts and wildlife refuges owned by every citizen. The hours are torturous, and the rewards inconsistent.
more:
PARKLAND, Wa. — The next time somebody mindlessly bashes a “federal bureaucrat,” as if the term itself were a parasitic disease, remember the bright young woman we said goodbye to here a few days ago: Margaret Anderson, a park ranger in a flag-draped casket.
...The other point worth noting is about how selfless and valuable so many public employees are — especially those who work the parks, forests, deserts and wildlife refuges owned by every citizen. The hours are torturous, and the rewards inconsistent.
more:
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Hunting Access & Hunter Behavior
A recent study done by Responsive Management titled, Issues Related to Hunting Access in the United States, indicated that difficulty gaining access to lands for hunting has become a constraint to recruiting and retaining sportsmen. Adequate access to land is one of the fundamental issues that affect the future of hunting.
The survey asked hunters about possible reasons that landowners may close their land to public hunting. The top three related to the misuse of the land: irresponsible shooting, alcohol use, or other bad behavior by hunters. Other top reasons cited were property damage caused by hunters; litter;landowner wanting to allow only personal/family use of the land; and liability concerns.
Unfortunately asking landowners that have closed their land was not within the scope of this study. My reading over the years points to landowners wanting to be in control of what goes on on their land and the only way currently open to them is posting.
The survey asked hunters about possible reasons that landowners may close their land to public hunting. The top three related to the misuse of the land: irresponsible shooting, alcohol use, or other bad behavior by hunters. Other top reasons cited were property damage caused by hunters; litter;landowner wanting to allow only personal/family use of the land; and liability concerns.
Unfortunately asking landowners that have closed their land was not within the scope of this study. My reading over the years points to landowners wanting to be in control of what goes on on their land and the only way currently open to them is posting.
Monday, January 2, 2012
The Meaning of Meat: Adult-Onset Hunters Look to the Land for Sustenance
From http://northernwoodlands.org/ by Tovar Cerulli
As a teenager, Deborah Perkins found hunting repulsive. During her years at Greely High School in Cumberland, Maine, she wrote a passionate essay arguing that the pursuit was morally wrong. Two decades later – now living 25 miles north, in Poland, and working as a consulting wildlife biologist – she hunts grouse, turkey, and deer.
more:
Sunday, January 1, 2012
Celebrating 2011
A hearty New
Year’s cheer from all of us here at Orion-The Hunters’ Institute to you and
yours.
With all the
problems in the world and hard times here at home, it is easy to get a bit
gloomy - not to mention the fact that most hunting seasons are over until
spring.
However, as I
look back on 2011 there are many accomplishments to be proud of:
·
The
concept of fair chase is now common knowledge, as evidenced by the passing of
the 600,000 sales mark of Jim Posewitz’s classic Beyond Fair Chase
·
Wildlife
as a public trust resource was restored and strengthened in a state legislative
battle coordinated by Orion that has positive national ramifications
·
Hunting
Think Tank II was
successfully held at the Max McGraw Wildlife Center with support from McGraw,
the Pope and Young Club and a great group of deep thinkers
·
Our Fair Chase Hunting blog is averaging
over 2,000 page views per month
·
The
Orion message of ethical hunting is being wonderfully portrayed on the normally
dismal TV hunting channels through Randy Newberg’s On Your Own Adventures show
·
Founder
Jim Posewitz has published a new book, Taking A Bullet for Conservation, The Bull
Moose Party- A Centennial
Reflection 1912-2012
·
Poz is also engaged in an effort to restore a free ranging,
huntable bison population on 3 million acres of eastern Montana prairie.
The day-to-day
value of Orion was summed up to me in a phone message I got last month from
Leslie Kaufman, a reporter and blogger with the New York Times. She said,
“I have a question about hunter ethics and I was told that Orion is the place
to go.”
I am optimistic about the future of hunting and the role
of hunters in wildlife conservation and look forward to more successes in 2012.
Wishing you a
productive and successful 2012!
A hunter’s new years cheer,
Eric and Ingrid
Nuse
and the entire
Orion family: Mark Hirvonen, Jim Posewitz, Jim Tantillo, Pat Hudak, John Organ,
Randy Newberg, and Gayle Joslin
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