- Location
- WMU248 near Edmonton
Oh and the ones with white spots taste best.
shoot the fawn? I hear it tastes better.
If you cannot shoot a bear that has cubs with it, why is it so different with a hoofed animal? I actually physically threatened a hunting partner that if he pulled the trigger on a cow moose we saw a few years ago, that had a calf moose with it(no older than 1 months at best) he'd be pretty sorry. He never pulled that trigger.......................damn good thing too. Probably a good thing to discuss it with your hunting partners BEFORE you go......................
Let's hope good karma comes my way lol.
If you cannot shoot a bear that has cubs with it, why is it so different with a hoofed animal?
You did what all ethical hunters would have done. The chances of the young ones not surviving are very poor without the mother. Now their are two more to harvest for next year.
Very cool and I commend you on a wise choice.
A deer fawn is fully capable of independent survival by the fall of its first year. It's able to walk almost immediately after birth.
A bear cub stays with its mother until sometime in the second year of its life; they hibernate together during the cubs' first winter. It is born weighing less than a pound or so, blind and helpless. It takes longer to grow, mature and learn the survival skills it requires.
There is no comparison between the two. Incidentally, rats are ###ually mature within a month or two, and are independent at that point. Which means...absolutely nothing. It is just as irrelevant as comparing bears to deer in this regard.
Bears are also born well before they leave the den in spring, so using the fact they are blind and tiny at birth is a bit misleading.
Regardless, your intention is correct. Hard to compare two animals that are so biologically different.
Ethical can be a subjective term, depending on the circumstances.
If the population in the area is low and you are looking to rebuild it, not shooting is more 'ethical'.
If the population in the area is too high and you are trying to thin the herd, shooting is more ethical.
We have controlled shotgun where I hunt and last year I passed on a doe and her fawn who wandered by each day for 6 days for one and one reason only... I wanted a buck with a nice rack for a European mount. Last day of the controlled hunt... if it's brown it's down. If I have no motive other than meat in the freezer... if it's brown it's down.
My ethics deer hunting where I do are limited to 'is it legal' and 'will it be clean'.
Where my moose camp is located is a complete different story. If I happen to get a cow tag, I will pass on any shot if there is any sign of a calf in the area.




























