Thanks man, I really appreciate that! I live on Vancouver Island, but I do have family in Kamloops. Maybe we could arrange something one day, I'll fire you a PM if I'm heading into the interior soon.
And thanks to everyone for the continued input, I'm finding it very helpful. A lot of great posts, much appreciated.
I went ahead and picked up a cheap 10/22 today, once I get my marksmanship to an acceptable level I'll look into some small game hunting.
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I haven't yet got up to mammals yet but when I got my first grouse I did have a sad feeling like here was an animal that was just alive and I made it dead. I held it twitching in my hands and it still felt warm. But in the end I knew that I was going to eat it, that I have spent my entire life at the top of a food chain and was responsible for every living thing that passed through my body.
When I got my goose I felt a little differently than that grouse because #### geese, that's why. They're awful ####-hawks and blat all over the place and deserve to be blasted from the sky. Plus when I caught up to mine it fought like a dickens and every peck made me hate it more.
Hunting is entirely for the sentimental. You needn't get all grossed out by the processing part of it but if you do, that's natural. Just take a deep breath and finish the job.
But next weekend when I go goose hunting for the first time since my father died last year I damned well expect to get emotional. I spent every fall hunting with him and it will be tough to go out without him there with me. But I'll still go because I love being outdoors and I want to remember all the good times I had with him as well as share the good times with friends and other family. Without some emotional connection to what we're doing this whole sport of hunting is really either barbarism or overly difficult grocery shopping. It's the connection to our mentors and friends who have gone out with us and gone on without us that makes hunting what it is.
I have hunted since i was 8. Almost 40 years later, it is still a very visceral and emotional thing for me. Connects us back to a time where we (and a great many people on this earth still do) HAD to hunt to survive. I deeply respect every animal i kill for food, and honour it as such.
As for rodents and pests, well #### 'em.
There's a thing called the "Hunter's Melancholy". It's a term used to describe the weird mixed feelings a lot of us get when we kill an animal. I've never seen it put into words 100% accurately. And I don't really think it ever can be because the feelings we experience all vary from person to person. But I will say that a few posters in this thread have touched at the heart of it.
I could go on for a while on this subject and never quite explain it adequately. It's a feeling that has to be experienced for a man to truly know what it's like.
I am going to go ahead and say if you don't want to kill something, don't kill something. However it just and animal and who care about bugs. Start by killing spiders when they are in the house and mosquitoes when ever you some.
After that get a .22lr and shoot:
mice- they cause havoc in the world and spread disease
squirrels- there are a billion of them. Who cares
Crows and ravens- these birds are the biggest di$%s in the bird world. They kill or injure small birds just for the heck of it, eat all the food out of bird feeders and scream at 4 am on a Sunday
Magpies - next in line for biggest di$%s. They will peck out cow's eyes while the cow is alive.
Coyotes - overpopulation will just make them starve and they are considered a pest to farmers. They eat pets, and scare cows and horses forcing them run into fences and then have to be put down
Deer- again overpopulation is bad. There are people who monitor wildlife population and hand out tags accordingly to keep numbers healthy but not over populating
If you still can't handle that hunting is not for you. Not to mention having to cut up and animal after you shot it




























