I'll inject my 2 cents into this one for no better reason than it's 5:15am, i'm bored and i'm at the tail end of a nightshift. Disclaimer, i'm not trying to come off as rude or arrogant. Please try not to take this post that way:
Yeah, that's not really upland hunting. I'm guessing you shoot ducks on the water as well.
Where i come from, yes, it is upland hunting. At least, it's our version. Just because we don't hunt over dogs in fields (the distinct lack of birds in fields, or fields for that matter, prohibits this type of activity) doesn't make it any less of a hunt or make us any less ethical. Also, yes, i'll shoot ducks on the water. I hunt to bring home meat, not to feel morally superior or to pat myself on the back while saying my way of doing things is somehow more "sporting" than someone elses. I'm not saying you see things that way, but your post kind of came off that way to me at least.
When it comes to the ethics side of things, which is where this thread took a derail, a different type of way to look at things is this: We're killing things here, not practicing graceful golf swings. Kill your game and kill it quickly. In my experience, killing them on the ground, or in a tree, has always been the most effective way of making that clean kill and making sure death comes as quick as possible for the bird. What's more sure? A head shot at a stationary target? Or a wing shot at something flying at any number of angles at 30 miles an hour? To each their own but it's something to think about.
Birds in a tree AND ducks in the water are both LEGAL... not the way I prefer to hunt, but for some it is less about "sport" (wingshooting), and more about putting meat on the table... judgement causes division... none of us can afford that these days.
Pretty well sums it up. As long as it's legal, we shouldn't bicker to much. We all have different sets of ethics that we stick to but as long as we're within the law, it's all good.
I hear you HC, but I have to say, I disagree.
I'm fine with judging certain kinds of hunters. For example, I'm fine judging the guys who poach, shoot out of season, shoot over the limits, don't make every effort to recover downed game, wound animals and don't track them down etc etc. I'm okay judging the guys who trespass, leave garbage, shoot too close to others, barge into areas other hunters are already in, etc etc. I'm guessing you're okay with those kinds of judgements as well. So it's simply where the line gets drawn.
This thread is about upland guns and loads. Boasting about working your way up a tree, picking ruffies off with a .22 ISN'T a post about upland guns and loads.
You're right. Most people i know wouldn't tolerate the types of things you've detailed. But most of those are legal issues. And you weren't disputing the law. You were disputing his ethics. That type of "upland" or bird hunting, whether he does it with a shotgun or a .22, might be the only type open to that gentleman in the area he lives in. It certainly is to me and i live in the same province as you.
I've recently purchased a .22 and am going to be trying to kill most, if not all of my birds this year on the ground, or in trees, with head shots. It's a major departure from the full choked 16 gauge Wingmaster that i'm used to. #4 Federals run great in that gun so if i had a "go to" "upland" type of gun/ammo combo, i guess that'd be it. But since i generally use the Wingmaster for headshots, on the ground or in a tree, getting used to the new .22 shouldn't be that tough. Just have to be a little more precise is all. On with the thread.
