What would you gentlemen do?
Who cares? - you lived up to your ethics and walked away from a shot you didn't like the look of for whatever reason.
That's a hunter.
Really doesn't matter what others would or would not have done.
What would you gentlemen do?
Foxer said:Who cares? - you lived up to your ethics and walked away from a shot you didn't like the look of for whatever reason.
That's a hunter.
Really doesn't matter what others would or would not have done.
What if you had parked the car and prepared for a 4km hike over the hill, but after only a few steps up pops a Booner? You gonna pass on that shot... is that road hunting... did not think so.
icedog said:I've passed up a number of bears the last few years.."let them walk" as Hannibal says. For me, spring bear hunting has become an excuse to get out for a drive and a walk in the woods. Last year my situation was much like Hannibal's...just too easy. Both the bear and I were having a good day up to that point, and I saw no purpose in ruining it for either of us. This year, after talking during the winter about getting a sausage bear come spring, I was talked into a stalk and will be picking up my sausage in a week or so. I guess I'm softening up in my senior years, as I'm no where near as motivated to make the kill as I used to be. I think increasing age brings many of us to a clearer recognition of our own mortality, and a greater reverance for the life of all creatures (excepting of course things like mosquitoes, rats, and wasps).
For me at least, killing an animal has taken on a different kind of significance than when I was younger, and I notice that some of my similarly aged hunting friends and family have expressed the same thoughts. In some ways this makes little sense at all, as I'm still a meat eater, and I know very well where the burgers, steaks and sausages come from. I'm not claiming there's any logic to it really, just explaining that my feelings about making the kill are much different than they were when I was younger...and that's why some of the game gets to walk.




























