Guys - it's really not that complex.
There is a reasonable accepted definition:
'unfair' is usually accepted to be where the animal has less of a chance evading you than you do of taking it. The advantage should lean to the animal. And without a doubt, all methods in canada pretty much guarantee that the average deer has a much better chance of avoiding the hunter than the average hunter has of shooting that deer. We take a small percent of the heard every year. Most animals will evade us.
This concept precludes the use of tools or techniques that make it 'too easy'. We all know a 300 yard rifle is no guarantee you'll even see a deer or get a shot off if you do. You still need to hunt. A helicopter gunship on the other hand might be a bit of an unfair advantage
Improper is usually accepted to be anything that either leads to an unnecessary or completely avoidable higher risk of wounding or losing animals or causing them severe distress without reason, anything that may result in the animal population as a whole being impacted negatively in such a fashion that it becomes less sustainable, and anything that puts other humans at risk.
You can't get into specifics like 'baiting is not fair chase' because it depends on the animal and the local circumstances as to whether or not it's fair or proper. If baiting bears means that fewer females with cubs are shot, then that might well be the best choice. If in another place they decide not to allow it due to the dangers of habituated bears, then that's the best choice.
It's a principle, not a specific set of actions. You have to apply the principle to what YOU do in YOUR situation and ask yourself if your methods and tools honestly fit the definition. Is it 'fair chase' for me to shoot at running deer at 100 yards? No - i can't make that shot often enough to be 'proper' and 'fair' to the animal. Can others? Probably - there's likely lots of guys who practice for that and could make the shot and get a clean kill with great consistency.
All you need to know is the principle. Then just apply it to what you do. "Ethical AND legal". "fair and proper". Most of us have a pretty good idea of what that means and the ideas behind it.
Why complicate things?
There is a reasonable accepted definition:
“Fair chase is the ethical and lawful pursuit and taking of free ranging wild game animals in a manner that does not give the hunter an improper or unfair advantage over such animals.”
'unfair' is usually accepted to be where the animal has less of a chance evading you than you do of taking it. The advantage should lean to the animal. And without a doubt, all methods in canada pretty much guarantee that the average deer has a much better chance of avoiding the hunter than the average hunter has of shooting that deer. We take a small percent of the heard every year. Most animals will evade us.
This concept precludes the use of tools or techniques that make it 'too easy'. We all know a 300 yard rifle is no guarantee you'll even see a deer or get a shot off if you do. You still need to hunt. A helicopter gunship on the other hand might be a bit of an unfair advantage
Improper is usually accepted to be anything that either leads to an unnecessary or completely avoidable higher risk of wounding or losing animals or causing them severe distress without reason, anything that may result in the animal population as a whole being impacted negatively in such a fashion that it becomes less sustainable, and anything that puts other humans at risk.
You can't get into specifics like 'baiting is not fair chase' because it depends on the animal and the local circumstances as to whether or not it's fair or proper. If baiting bears means that fewer females with cubs are shot, then that might well be the best choice. If in another place they decide not to allow it due to the dangers of habituated bears, then that's the best choice.
It's a principle, not a specific set of actions. You have to apply the principle to what YOU do in YOUR situation and ask yourself if your methods and tools honestly fit the definition. Is it 'fair chase' for me to shoot at running deer at 100 yards? No - i can't make that shot often enough to be 'proper' and 'fair' to the animal. Can others? Probably - there's likely lots of guys who practice for that and could make the shot and get a clean kill with great consistency.
All you need to know is the principle. Then just apply it to what you do. "Ethical AND legal". "fair and proper". Most of us have a pretty good idea of what that means and the ideas behind it.
Why complicate things?





















































