- Location
- Hillbilly shack in the boonies
I have hunted and guided over bait, baited for trapping and baited animals for research so I might have an opinion on this too.
I'm wondering if you are confusing ethics with challenge though. Baiting definately increases the odds of harvesting an animal, otherwise people wouldn't do it. It doesn't guarantee a harvest though. Food is a great motivator, but it doesn't cancel out an animals senses or flight instinct, it just gives them a reason to come around and hopefully stick around in your chosen spot. For every deer that will eat out of your hand or bear that lays down in the doughnut pile, there are two that only come in after dark or shy away at the slightest fidget or puff of wind. Using bait to lessen the time in the field only works in the context that you have some other guy (the guide) baiting for you and can show up later when an animal is coming in regularily. This is more a product of guiding in that good guides can take you out to see animals not coming to bait too, since they spend endless hours out scoping and learning what lives in their territory. Nothing replaces time spent in the field.
How you choose to hunt is personal, and should be as long as its legal AND the harvest is done in a humane manner. I think most people would agree that not all challenging hunts are ethical and not all ethical hunts are challenging. Back to the OP though- I'd personally be much more proud of baiting in a wild lion than shooting a free ranging one that was raised.
Very well done
I know we all think of it as a big cat if it had any human contact , but its a Lion , and it will tear your face off , if it can get to you , thats fair game..




















































