How easy has your hunt become? Are you missing something?

You have anger management issues.... I suggest you see a councilor..... You haven't been a member very long, perhaps reading stories and acclimatizing yourself to the site is required..... otherwise I predict that you are in for a short stay...... You need to get to know the members....

As for hunting, you are delirious if you think we should all go back to sustenance techniques and even further delirious if you think anyone in this country truly "needs" to harvest animals to feed their family..... on an "out to lunch scale of 1-10', you rate a solid 27.....

Oh no.... banned from a forum because I think there's a bunch of bull#### going on in this country concerning gun laws and hunting laws?

And you sir need to grow a pair of REAL balls and face some reality of what is going on in Canada. You have serious denial issues and I suggest YOU seek a councilor to loose some of that fear.

Read and absorb UN Agenda 21 and you might start to get a clue where my comment is coming from. But that takes courage so don't suspect you will.
 
Roadhunters see and do cool stuff as well.
In 2009 I saw this Owl , it was there several times when I drove past the same spot...
I suggested it was Odd and that I should try to capture it.

Soooo...out of the truck with a blanket I went, into waste deep snow...
It was a real job to get close to this guy, It kept flying just a little bit.
But I eventually got close enough to throw the blanket over it :)

WOW , let me tell you .
These little guys make a sound with their beak that commands respect.
If one were to get chomped it would surely hurt a lot.

I cut my day short at 11am and did the 45 min drive to town with it in a box covered with the same blanket.
We called the report a poacher line to advise someone what we were up to.

We were met at the local fish and wildlife office to turn this fella over.
They said that when they get this week it is rare that they recover but that they would let me know how it did (I never heard a word back from them)

pics%20suzy%20395_zpsfvu5iviu.jpg~original

pics%20suzy%20397_zpsa950la9l.jpg~original


I wish I had a photo of it with its wings spread, It was truly remarkable to see up close.
This is the only photo I can find at the office.
pics%20suzy%20398_zpsabsvdxow.jpg~original
 
Oh no.... banned from a forum because I think there's a bunch of bull#### going on in this country concerning gun laws and hunting laws?

And you sir need to grow a pair of REAL balls and face some reality of what is going on in Canada. You have serious denial issues and I suggest YOU seek a councilor to loose some of that fear.

Read and absorb UN Agenda 21 and you might start to get a clue where my comment is coming from. But that takes courage so don't suspect you will.


I am truly sorry that your life is lived in such a paranoid state...... I can't help you with that

I also can't help you to discuss hunting in a hunting forum without bringing in your exaggerated agenda. See, those if us in this area of the forum are here to discuss how we hunt, what we harvest, how our prey outwits us etc. If you truly wish to remain a member of the forum while talking your conspiracy theories, there are other sections... it doesnt belong here.....

I can't tell you how to conduct yourself, that is your choice..... But if you want to remain a member of the forum you have to live by the rules..... and it isnt my place to tell you that you are outside of them......

but it appears your mind is made up....
 
Oh no.... banned from a forum because I think there's a bunch of bull#### going on in this country concerning gun laws and hunting laws?

And you sir need to grow a pair of REAL balls and face some reality of what is going on in Canada. You have serious denial issues and I suggest YOU seek a councilor to loose some of that fear.

Read and absorb UN Agenda 21 and you might start to get a clue where my comment is coming from. But that takes courage so don't suspect you will.


I am truly sorry that your life is lived in such a paranoid state...... I can't help you with that

I also can't help you to discuss hunting in a hunting forum without bringing in your exaggerated agenda. See, those if us in this area of the forum are here to discuss how we hunt, what we harvest, how our prey outwits us etc. If you truly wish to remain a member of the forum while talking your conspiracy theories, there are other sections... it doesnt belong here.....

I can't tell you how to conduct yourself, that is your choice..... But if you want to remain a member of the forum you have to live by the rules..... and it isnt my place to tell you that you are outside of them......

but it appears your mind is made up....
 
I understand the OPs opinion. However I can feel the knees and back complaining earlier in my foot born hunts and much more often then when I was younger.

And I'd much rather carry a 12 or a 10 gauge shotgun on my solo hunts. The reality is I get a lot more quality field time if I'm carrying a 20 gauge or the 410 these days. Myself I hope a quad is not a requirement in my future. :(
 
I am truly sorry that your life is lived in such a paranoid state...... I can't help you with that

I also can't help you to discuss hunting in a hunting forum without bringing in your exaggerated agenda. See, those if us in this area of the forum are here to discuss how we hunt, what we harvest, how our prey outwits us etc. If you truly wish to remain a member of the forum while talking your conspiracy theories, there are other sections... it doesnt belong here.....

I can't tell you how to conduct yourself, that is your choice..... But if you want to remain a member of the forum you have to live by the rules..... and it isnt my place to tell you that you are outside of them......

but it appears your mind is made up....

It's truly ignorant people like do not have a clue and live in denial that are the real problem. All is well in fantasy land, bread and circus and all that.

But I can't tell you to actually look deeper into these matters and use your critical thinking.

Appears your mind is made up as well.
 
It always seems like my hunting season starts with long, epic hikes through insane terrain. As the season goes on without meat in the freezer, I tend to do gravitate more towards field cruising to cover more ground. I am afraid of the day I decide the long epic hike isn't worth it anymore and just cut straight to the easy way.
 
It always seems like my hunting season starts with long, epic hikes through insane terrain. As the season goes on without meat in the freezer, I tend to do gravitate more towards field cruising to cover more ground. I am afraid of the day I decide the long epic hike isn't worth it anymore and just cut straight to the easy way.

depends what you are after.... some day, your hard work may yield your trophy...... something that cant be seen from a road or trail..... do them both and enjoy your meat...
 
I live/work in the city very far from most of my usual hunting areas and camp. I don't have the luxury of doing much scouting and/or pre-season legwork. I appreciate how much my atv let's me cover ground and how my climbing stand gets me up a tree quickly. I need to maximize my time afield and I have zero qualms with employing techniques and/or technology that improves my efficiency in a.) enjoying myself and b.) successfully harvesting game.

Patrick
 
I employ a pretty wide array of tactics to my hunts. I truly do enjoy sitting on stand tho, whether it's a ground blind or a tree stand. I can't sit all day like some, but those 2-3 hours a day during the rut make a huge difference in the amount of deer I see. The last two years I have spent most of my time walking trails and driving roads next to land I have permission on. Not my most successful years, but I have gotten to know some new country lately and found a couple new stand locations. I live about 3 hours from my hunting spots so I too have to maximize my time afield. Hopefully this coming year I can get away from my job a little more and do some more scouting and preseason prep work.
 
It always seems like my hunting season starts with long, epic hikes through insane terrain. As the season goes on without meat in the freezer, I tend to do gravitate more towards field cruising to cover more ground. I am afraid of the day I decide the long epic hike isn't worth it anymore and just cut straight to the easy way.

The day you decide that your "long, epic hikes" aren't worth it may coincide with the day that you drop a large bull at trails end.
 
Filling two freezers for two families every year by way of road hunting to cover terrain without re-injuring has provided me with moose soup rather than tag-soup for going on thirty years. With road hunting I mean using the roads to get to areas where the moose is located. Get to scout areas to locate moose reasonably close to transport after the kill. i will then haul out the ATV and take it through brush and terrain rough enough to drop jaws. Lugging 125 lbs quarters for miles is in my distant past, my back told me that.

Being called a lazy fat a$$ed hunter for doing so by a keyboard adventurer is beyond my reasoning. Game is plenty, If living in an area where tags and game is less abundant - hoofing it would definitely be an option. Trophy animal is never on my mind as Antlers are too chewy and make for a tasteless gravy. If one presented itself, the meat gained would be more valuable.

Each to their own, if hiking and stalking for miles then lugging for a day or so followed by PT for a few months is you thing - go for it.
 
Hunting is to all, whatever they wish it to be..........some prefer gentlemanly hunts where breaking a sweat is unlikely and some prefer long arduous treks through the hinterlands. I have done both and find each has it's attributes. I have walked more than 100 kms (as one young fellow said he did this whole season) on a single 6 day Dall sheep hunt. I have literally walked the soles off my feet in the sands of Botswana, following elephant tracks. Getting back to camp to remove my boots and find them full of blood, and yes I hunted the next day........I have packed out 12 miles with a pack that weighed 6 lbs more than I did at the time, I have packed until I have passed out and woke up face down under my pack on the side of a mountain. I returned to my canoe one day after a 4 day goat hunt with my pants literally hanging in tatters from the waistband with gashes in both legs that should have had stitches, but alas no nurses on the goat rocks.
I have also learned that when God presents you with an animal, that falls within your expected parameters, in the first hour of the first day hunting............take it!!!! Occasionally one is entitled to a "GIMME".
I am of the age where my arduous hunting is pretty much over now (turned 60 a week ago) and I don't regret it. I have done all the grueling hunting that I wanted in my 20s-30s-40s and find little pleasure left in that that kind of hunting. Hopefully I have now reached the gentlemanly phase of hunting and have done some of it in the last decade. With Argos and campers and the like, my hunting has become less strenuous and equally productive. I do not feel as though I am short changing myself with these modern conveniences as I have, shall we say, worked up to them. I know that goats will still be safe from me and anyone else who hunts in this fashion, as will most sheep and I will know that those out there who have attained these animals and many others have done their work and suffered at least a little in order to say I am a sheep hunter or I am a goat hunter.
I do not denigrate the meat hunters, that use any method within their legal constrictions, to fill their larder for them and their families. Let's face it, this IS the origin of hunting and any legal pursuit is just fine with me. The point of this type of hunting is to fill the larder in the most efficient and least costly way, in both money and time invested. This genre of hunting is entirely different from my chosen hunting path, therefore entirely different tactics are employed. I may not understand the methodology or execution of this type of hunting, but then they probably don't "get" me either.
Hunting has always been as difficult, or as easy as one wishes it to be. I don't think this is a new concept, I just think that as the membership gets older here on CGN, we use our resources differently and possibly better to make our hunting experience less arduous and possibly more enjoyable. If one finds they are becoming bored with the ease in which they are able to fill their tags, then there is always bows and pointy sticks or possibly more challenging game, elsewhere in the country or planet.
There are the two greatly differing philosophies when it comes to hunting, there are the "live to hunt" guys, which make up the majority on this forum, and the "hunt to live" guys who generally don't waste their time on forums like this. For those, such as myself, who live to hunt, it is not a chore that needs doing every fall and needs to get done as quickly and as efficiently as possible so one may get back to the real business at hand. It is really a way of life. Back in my working years, I was always planning a hunt somewhere, somehow, 365 days a year. Not all plans came to fruition and therefore fell under the heading "dreams" but nonetheless I was planning/dreaming constantly. Physical condition never entered the equation as I knew I would do whatever it took to succeed or at least return. I did not plan hunts to test my physical abilities or limits, although some did well beyond what would seem reasonable and actually to the ultimate point of survival, a couple of times. Although I will vividly remember those hunts and times, I would never say they were enjoyable in the least. I certainly would never advise anyone to follow my lead and put themselves in peril, but they are part of my hunting repertoire. I also look upon some of my very luxurious African hunts with great pleasure and fond memories although hardship was no where to be seen........except possibly the heat.
As far as the use of technology to ease the hardships of collecting game........if one views it as such.........then I guess the lawmakers and one's own ethics will serve to determine the legal/ethical path. Personally, give me good pack, a spotting scope and an accurate rifle to 500 mtrs and cut me loose..........I'll be OK.
 
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Hunting is to all, whatever they wish it to be..........some prefer gentlemanly hunts where breaking a sweat is unlikely and some prefer long arduous treks through the hinterlands. I have done both and find each has it's attributes. I have walked more than 100 kms (as one young fellow said he did this whole season) on a single 6 day Dall sheep hunt. I have literally walked the soles off my feet in the sands of Botswana, following elephant tracks. Getting back to camp to remove my boots and find them full of blood, and yes I hunted the next day........I have packed out 12 miles with a pack that weighed 6 lbs more than I did at the time, I have packed until I have passed out and woke up face down under my pack on the side of a mountain. I returned to my canoe one day after a 4 day goat hunt with my pants literally hanging in tatters from the waistband with gashes in both legs that should have had stitches, but alas no nurses on the goat rocks.
I have also learned that when God presents you with an animal, that falls within your expected parameters, in the first hour of the first day hunting............take it!!!! Occasionally one is entitled to a "GIMME".
I am of the age where my arduous hunting is pretty much over now (turned 60 a week ago) and I don't regret it. I have done all the grueling hunting that I wanted in my 20s-30s-40s and find little pleasure left in that that kind of hunting. Hopefully I have now reached the gentlemanly phase of hunting and have done some of it in the last decade. With Argos and campers and the like, my hunting has become less strenuous and equally productive. I do not feel as though I am short changing myself with these modern conveniences as I have, shall we say, worked up to them. I know that goats will still be safe from me and anyone else who hunts in this fashion, as will most sheep and I will know that those out there who have attained these animals and many others have done their work and suffered at least a little in order to say I am a sheep hunter or I am a goat hunter.
I do not denigrate the meat hunters, that use any method within their legal constrictions, to fill their larder for them and their families. Let's face it, this IS the origin of hunting and any legal pursuit is just fine with me. The point of this type of hunting is to fill the larder in the most efficient and least costly way, in both money and time invested. This genre of hunting is entirely different from my chosen hunting path, therefore entirely different tactics are employed. I may not understand the methodology or execution of this type of hunting, but then they probably don't "get" me either.
Hunting has always been as difficult, or as easy as one wishes it to be. I don't think this is a new concept, I just think that as the membership gets older here on CGN, we use our resources differently and possibly better to make our hunting experience less arduous and possibly more enjoyable. If one finds they are becoming bored with the ease in which they are able to fill their tags, then there is always bows and pointy sticks or possibly more challenging game, elsewhere in the country or planet.

I have not walked on the soles of my feet in Botswana, but I completely agree with this great summary.
 
We all hunt little different ways and have different ideas about hunting. I'm not getting into what I think is wrong or right.
One think I like to say. If that made the 14 year old girl happy, made her exided about hunting when she was on the farm comfortable, good for her! She had positive experience and she can maybe challenge her self in future years to come. As I wouldn't think of bringing someone to a hunt farm, maybe it is a good idea for positive first experience rather then them walking for days in could and maybe not even seeing anything and maybe never want to try it again.
 
I have hunted for 45 years and I must be stupid or something, but it is never easy for me. It is work. Got two deer this year and one in 2014, but before that I had a five year dry spell. And not for lack of trying. some years it was over 30 days in the field. Not driving around either.

People say "Oh do you bow hunt?" Jeez -- I rarely get close enough to a deer to hit it with a rifle, never mind a bow.
 
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