how to convince a vegetarian to eat game meat

Some aren't vegetarians by choice. I once met one who couldn't eat any fat or she would doubled over with pain. A slice of baloney would put her out of commission for a few hours.
On the other hand I've met ones who wouldn't eat vegies fertilized by cowdung. :runaway:
It takes all kinds to make the world go round.
 
I don't know about trying to persuade them, but all joking aside, I've found that my veggie friends (especially a couple of vegan friends) actually understand why I'm a hunter far better than many of my cidiot acquaintances. Now these aren't your typical wing nut lefties who saw Bamby once too many times, but folks who are reasonably inteligent people who make reasonable and rational decisions.
 
I tell 'em to keep eating the rabbit food so when the 'Great Famine' comes, those of us that are on top of the food chain will have somebody...I mean something to eat. snicker.
"...vegetarian..." I'll say it since nobody else has. It's a Native word meaning 'bad hunter'.
 
I'm not sure why anyone would want to persuade a veggie to eat meat. The idea sounds retarded. Lots of hunters stereotype veggies and vegans. There's more commonality in our views and respect for wild life than most would think. Its not hard to discuss hunting for food with them and if it is then they are'nt the kind of people you want to hang around with anyway.
Now getting them to accept fox hunting with dogs is different matter!
 
We got our vegetarian we converted! :D

Got her drinking (didn't really have to twist her arm...) and fed her a Meat lovers Pizza we made, "OMG BEST THING I HAVE EVER EATEN!!!" Her parents were hippies who didn't want her eating meat, so it wasn't even her choice, but shes on the meat wagon now! :D
 
This thread has reminded me of the 90s band Dead Eye #### song New Age Girl. It's stuck in my head now. Probably some of the most memorable lyrics of the decade, "she's a vegetarian, she don't eat meat but she sure likes the bone"
 
Sponsor a vegetarian:


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One that I was going to eat anyway, one that you should have eaten, and an extra one so that you being a vegetarian actually results in more animals being eaten.
 
I dunno, I can buy a family pack of mediocre steaks for $40 and it'll last two weeks, or $57 to take two deer in rifle season and fill my freezer with organic, natural, fair-chase meat for an entire season.

3 tags for $78 means my family eats well for almost a half year (obviously not eating it EVERY night) for the same cost as two family packs of sh!tty steaks from Costco.
 
My wife had started to slide off the vegetarian wagon before I met her. She was eating fish and chicken and after a couple of years had even gone from to tagging along when I went bird hunting to hunting birds (especially geese) herself. One year a shoulder injury left me basically 1 handed. I figured the only animal I could deal with myself was a pronghorn and I was able to fill a doe tag. The doe got turned into a small supply of excellent sausage. One night I was cooking myself some of these sausage when my wife asked "How do those taste?"

I said "Just like they smell". She wanted to try some and knowing I was safe, let her taste a bit. She loved it and asked for more. Not having enough to make it through the winter already I said "Bugger off, she's just little. Go get your own". My wife bought herself a rifle the next spring and shot her first deer in the fall.

Dean
 
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Really though, it's not usually worth the bother of trying. Let people live as they want; hypocritical for us to do otherwise.

Mind, any militant vegan halfwit deserves whatever you give - if they can't let you eat a steak in peace, make sure to rub it in just how good the venison is and how much like Bambi it had resembled before you shot it. Make'em cry.
 
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