Sorry fellas,
I have come into this a little late. I have actually been hunting fairly hard and with the loss of two tree stands (both doubles for my wife and I) in the past three years, I am running ground blinds with daily set-up and tear-down. More to pack and earlier into the woods.
I have had far less success than I would have liked so far this season.
However, that being said, I wanted to comment on this thread. Many times each season, hunters are getting shot by people who are unsure of their targets. This, unfortunately, is not new. I would like to add a quote from a book, Woodcraft, by George W. "Nessmuk" Sears, published in 1888
"If you go to hunt, take a solemn oath never to point the shooting end of your gun toward yourself or an other human being.
In still-hunting, swear yourself black in the face never to shoot at a dim, moving object in the woods for a deer, unless you have seen that it is a deer. In these days there are quite as many hunters as deer in the woods; and it is a heavy, wearisome job to pack a dead or wounded man ten or twelve miles out to a clearing, let alone that it spoils all the pleasure of the hunt and is apt to raise hard feelings among his relations.
In a word, act coolly and rationally. So shall your outing be a delight in conception and the fulfilment thereof; while the memory of it shall come back to you in pleasant dreams, when legs and shoulders are too stiff and old for knapsack and rifle."
These words, penned in 1888 reflect a philosophy wished for by woodsmen and hunters even then. How so are these practices needed today? I read this book nearly 30 years ago. I have hunted with men (never twice) who shoot at sounds and movements. Our country is smaller (more settled, less raw) now than it was in 1888. We have more hunters than in 1888. Surely, we should, in 130 years, have learned these basic lessons. Yet, somehow, we seem to repeat this year after year.
When I lived and hunted in NS, I often came home empty-handed. So often that my wife once asked why I bothered to carry a rifle. MY answer, too often, was, "So I can shoot back." I have not used that answer once in 12 years of hunting in AB. Not because the hunters are any more educated (still lots of them kicking bullets around at sounds), but because there is more room and I don't mind going off the beaten path.
Best of luck to you all this season.
Ted