lefty-Cunuck
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I am curious, Why does archery keep coming up in the discussion?
LC
LC
If you are a practiced and proficient shooter in the scenarios you will find game at in the wild like I have already stated, why are you bringing up the "humane" or "respect" argument? Is it because you have seen some guy try a long range poke with little to no knowledge or ability to make the shot? why paint everyone with this same brush? because that is what it appears that some people are doing by the posts here.I believe that the primary reason that hunters don't take extreme long shots is "respect" to the animal for "humane reasons" where the margin of error is enhanced to further cripple a big game animal. Furthermore, what hunting skill is involved to aim and pull the trigger........what hunting still? This is what the majority of hunters who are commenting about on this thread..............don't you get it?
I am curious, Why does archery keep coming up in the discussion?
LC
I'm not sure, but I posted something to this effect earlier when flight times were being discussed.I am curious, Why does archery keep coming up in the discussion?
LC
please explain how it is different other than the target? If you can hit paper in the 10 ring why is that not good enough in your eyes to transfer to shooting an animal?

I think that many are not proficient enough to hunt with archery tackle and an equal amount are likely not proficient enough to hunt with a rifle long range.
For me it comes down to proficiency....I don't necessarily agree with having someone who had 5 minutes of instruction shoot an animal at 1000 yards anymore than I would want someone with 5 minutes of instruction shooting a bear in the head with a x-bow, I think they are both equally ridiculous scenarios....but likely have both been successful and unsuccessful.
Is the measure of success at taking a chance what dictates whether something is ok or not?
LC
they are a "what if" scenario, the "what if" for my question/scenario was the animal doesn't move for the shot.
the op that I quoted said he had great respect for target punchers only, well I hold a greater respect for those that put their skills to use in the field by putting food on their table for their families and then an even greater respect for those that defend our country........ they both IMO put their skills to better use than just punching paper in controlled settings.
read my post again, because I am not talking about taking a bench rest shooter out of his comfort zone and giving him a diferent rifle to make the shot, I specifically said
When you compare it to something like archery, it's actually pretty much on par though. If you look at these stats out of Maryland in a 17 year study, archers wound 18% of the animals they shoot at and miss 11% so basically 29% of the first shots are bad. Is that acceptable to you?
1. We can all agree that wounding animals is bad;I also said that consciously increasing the chance of wounding animals in order to make money is not ethical
From my perspective it's another aspect of hunting that seems to have nearly universal support...
But the conversation isn't really about me.
The key points again are (and I quote myself to preface):
1. We can all agree that wounding animals is bad;
2. Getting closer means less chance of wounding animals;
3. They purposely seek out longer shots than neccessary to harvest animals;
4. They therefore purposely seek out conditions that increase the risk of wounding animals;
5. They do this to make money.
I'd agree but that still does change the facts when comparing the two yet we whole-heartedly support one and many denounce the other. Why is that? Don't you feel that sets a dangerous precedent for the future of archery? It doesn't take a rocket scientist to correlate what hunters are criticizing long-range for to archery...heck I bet even an anti hunter could do it. Why do we give them this opportunity?
But that goes the other way too with setting precedents, doesn't it? In the future will it be OK to use drone mounted firearms to hunt? The antis will be anti regardless of what we say in this thread. They will not accept logic and reason - which is imo why they are anti in the first place. Should we muzzle ourselves simply because we are afraid of the antis?
I understand what started the thread, but my posts do not mention the show, I commented simply on the comments against long range hunting, I think that we can all agree that TV show aside there are people who can long range hunt proficiently, ethically and humanely while respecting the animal regardless of the opinions posted otherwise by those who look down on long range hunters.So now we are moving from criticising going out of your way to shoot at animals from a great distance in order to promote products and make money and equating that to criticising our troops??? Note my previous post where I said actions need to be considered in the proper context.
I said:
"Setting up at extreme ranges to shoot targets for fun/competition at long range is different than setting up at extreme ranges to shoot animals."
Also please keep in mind where this whole thread started from - a critique of BOTW.
But that goes the other way too with setting precedents, doesn't it? In the future will it be OK to use drone mounted firearms to hunt? The antis will be anti regardless of what we say in this thread. They will not accept logic and reason - which is imo why they are anti in the first place. Should we muzzle ourselves simply because we are afraid of the antis?
No we shouldn't muzzle ourselves but we should remember that what we are criticizing today is most likely to bite us in the posterior tomorrow. Arguments such as wounding rates, miss rates, recovery times must be universally applied, not cherry picked to serve our individual needs. Just because it's not affecting me today doesn't mean it won't in the future. Discussion is productive but make sure the rock you are hurling doesn't have to go through the walls of your glass house before hitting the target. I'm happy you decided to return to this discussion....it seems you are actually interested in the discussion. I appreciate your point of view.
And I won't be levered into believing a difference in perceived ethics is a "threat to hunting" as Sheep suggests. In fact I believe in the end it may very well be what saves it.
Produce a show on the importance of practice and how it applies to any discipline then. Seems a universal principle to me.
you quoted one competition and that miss rate is very high in retrospect. without knowing all the details it is hard to take one example and apply it to every scenarioYes, I read your post carefully. If you read mine carefully you will see the implication is that since even those who practice a great deal, use good equipment and have favourable conditions have quite a high miss rate of a 10" target on the initial shot we could reasonably believe that hunters under the conditions you suggest will have similar results. Here is a question for you that may be even more on point. I assume that you shoot/hunt at long range. Do you keep records of every shooting session? What are your first shot hit rates on targets? How do the rates change as the range increases? It is safe to say the longer the distance the higher the initial shot miss rate (or overall miss rate) is, correct?
Exactly, it is about the entire hunting community and this long heritage that we are all so passionate about.
And archers use gear that increases the odds of wounding and there are plenty of archery shows on television that make money. Why do you support archery?




























