For most hunters, success defines a good hunt

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They antis are watching, not that that should come as any surprise.


ht tp://wildlife.org/for-most-hunters-success-defines-a-good-hunt/

For most hunters, success defines a good hunt


Hunters often say enjoying nature and bonding with friends and family are favorite parts of the experience, but what contributes most to the happiness they get from the hunt?

It’s the sense of achievement, recent research suggests, and understanding the nuances of this answer could help managers formulate more effective wildlife policies.

Rather than rely on surveys, researchers analyzed hunting tales posted to online sportsmen’s forums based across North America, from British Columbia to Texas. Trying to unpack what part of the hunt was the most satisfying, they coded 455 narratives recounting specific hunts for key words signifying contentment or discontent. They also compared the various types of satisfaction between hunting accounts featuring carnivores —bears, wolves, cougars and others — and ungulates such as deer, elk, moose and sheep.

“The dominant satisfaction talked about most frequently within stories was achievement — across the board, but even more so for carnivores,” said Alena Ebeling-Schuld, lead author on the paper available in open access on early view in the journal, Wildlife Society Bulletin. “Eighty-six percent of carnivore stories had achievement as dominant among multiple satisfactions expressed, as opposed to 81 percent of ungulate stories. What they were able to shoot or how well they performed mattered especially to carnivore hunters.”

Carnivore hunters described satisfaction from socializing with family and friends or spending time in nature less often than ungulate hunters, she said, and in nearly half of the stories in which carnivore hunters mentioned just one kind of satisfaction, it was always achievement.

“Carnivores are bigger and have bigger ranges of territory, so they’re more difficult to find, kill and get hunting permits for,” said Ebeling-Schuld, who was an undergraduate at the University of Victoria when she conducted the study. “The sense of achievement if you accomplish that is all the greater if you have more obstacles.”

The research can help managers develop alternative opportunities for non-consumptive wildlife recreation, Ebeling-Shuld said, and it suggests that hunter education programs could do more to highlight connecting with nature and other people as reasons to find happiness in hunting.

“These findings give us a better idea of how to keep hunters happy and wildlife populations sustainable,” she said. “If our results are representative of hunters on a large scale, if you design policy that doesn’t factor in that achievement is most important, your policy might not be successful or have hunter support. And if you’re making policy for carnivore hunting and basing it on data from ungulate hunting, it might not be effective.”

f:P::mad: And if your making policy is based of the words chosen on online forums you might find it too might not be all that effective. How very scientific.
 
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f:P::mad: And if your making policy is based of the words chosen on online forums you might find it too might not be all that effective. How very scientific.

No kidding! Perhaps I can get a grant to help develop policies that foster healthy ###ual relationships by analyzing internet ####! Makes about as much sense!
 
Hmmm, geez, so when I am on a hunting site, I should talk about the beautiful sunrises, the frost glittering like diamonds, the quiet and solitude? Those are the things I love about hunting. I go in the bush for those things when there is no season. If I'm on a photography site, I'll talk about the pictures I take. If I'm on a #### site, i"ll talk about the multitudes of women I bonk (yeah, right!!!), but when I'm on a hunting site, I do talk about the critters I shoot. When on a fishing site, I talk about the fish I caught, and when on a shooting site, I talk about my targets. WHat the hell do these people expect???????
 
Maybe you are on to something.

Today I was leisurely strolling down a logging road in Northern Ontario. The wind was blowing slightly shaking some leaves from the birch trees. They were floating gently to the ground with the sound of running water as the backdrop. Then a beautiful Ruffed Grouse stepped out of the underbrush not 25 yards in front of me. At that point I gently swung my double barrel in it's direction, thumbed off the safety and blasted him.

The end. :)

PS - I ate him and three of his buddies for supper. But they were "free range, Non-GMO, ate all natural feed, no added hormones or steroids and were not kept in inhumane cages" - so see, I care about what I put into my body...
 
I simply cannot care what anti hunters think of my actions. The more hunting/angling/consumptive oportunities the salad eaters try to whittle away, the more defiant I may become. F 'em....
 
I usually talk about my experiences, and appreciation of the hunt, without talking to others about what I killed or didn't kill. But the only question most people ever ask, whether they are hunters or not is - "did you get anything???" I blame the rest of our culture, not hunters for that. Sports reporting, political reporting, business reporting, etc etc. They only report win/lose.
 
For me, EVERY hunt is a good hunt! Whether or not I get a deer or a grouse or a rabbit is icing on the cake. The beauty of nature, the quality time I spend with good friends, the reflective solitude.......these are my fondest memories. The food I put on the table is very satisfying as well, and getting skunked is irritating, but I can't think of a "bad" hunt.
 
I don't measure success when I harvest game. Success in the field is having a safe and enjoyable experience with nature. Many times I returned home without game, however had a very successful day. Pulling the trigger and taking an animal takes only a micro-second, a very small period of time in the hunt. What is experienced prior to the kill is the actual act of hunting.https://imgur.com/yck41Da
 
I always use the line my father used once when someone was making fun of how much the single duck he had shot on a particular hunt had cost him. Dad said, "I figure it cost me the price of one shotgun shell. I was already standing in the middle of that slough in my waders when it happened to fly over me." Any day spent hunting is a good day.
 
I agree, so unscientific. On line posts by their very nature are going to highlight successful kills. Now there is a certain portion of the hunting population that does define success as a dead animal . CAn't deny those people are out there and its illustrated by the amount of poaching that goes on by people who will do anything, including break the law, to say they killed something and even then post pictures on-line and be proud of themselves.
But for the most part the guys that go out to the camp, spend a week with 3 or 4 buddies, one of them gets a deer, another one wins $50 playing poker, they all eat and drink way to much and make plans for next year, have had a wicked successful week of hunting, but you aren't going to see that described in an on-line forum.
 
They antis are watching, not that that should come as any surprise.


ht tp://wildlife.org/for-most-hunters-success-defines-a-good-hunt/

For most hunters, success defines a good hunt


Hunters often say enjoying nature and bonding with friends and family are favorite parts of the experience, but what contributes most to the happiness they get from the hunt?

It’s the sense of achievement, recent research suggests, and understanding the nuances of this answer could help managers formulate more effective wildlife policies.

Rather than rely on surveys, researchers analyzed hunting tales posted to online sportsmen’s forums based across North America, from British Columbia to Texas. Trying to unpack what part of the hunt was the most satisfying, they coded 455 narratives recounting specific hunts for key words signifying contentment or discontent. They also compared the various types of satisfaction between hunting accounts featuring carnivores —bears, wolves, cougars and others — and ungulates such as deer, elk, moose and sheep.

“The dominant satisfaction talked about most frequently within stories was achievement — across the board, but even more so for carnivores,” said Alena Ebeling-Schuld, lead author on the paper available in open access on early view in the journal, Wildlife Society Bulletin. “Eighty-six percent of carnivore stories had achievement as dominant among multiple satisfactions expressed, as opposed to 81 percent of ungulate stories. What they were able to shoot or how well they performed mattered especially to carnivore hunters.”

Carnivore hunters described satisfaction from socializing with family and friends or spending time in nature less often than ungulate hunters, she said, and in nearly half of the stories in which carnivore hunters mentioned just one kind of satisfaction, it was always achievement.

“Carnivores are bigger and have bigger ranges of territory, so they’re more difficult to find, kill and get hunting permits for,” said Ebeling-Schuld, who was an undergraduate at the University of Victoria when she conducted the study. “The sense of achievement if you accomplish that is all the greater if you have more obstacles.”

The research can help managers develop alternative opportunities for non-consumptive wildlife recreation, Ebeling-Shuld said, and it suggests that hunter education programs could do more to highlight connecting with nature and other people as reasons to find happiness in hunting.

“These findings give us a better idea of how to keep hunters happy and wildlife populations sustainable,” she said. “If our results are representative of hunters on a large scale, if you design policy that doesn’t factor in that achievement is most important, your policy might not be successful or have hunter support. And if you’re making policy for carnivore hunting and basing it on data from ungulate hunting, it might not be effective.”

f:P::mad: And if your making policy is based of the words chosen on online forums you might find it too might not be all that effective. How very scientific.

Sounds like somebody woke up a snowflake. That's the silliest thing I've seen any of them write,yet.
 
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