Why do we do it?

I think another reason is that only from hunting, does a person truly grasp the fragility, and therefore the value of life, of nature and of the circle of life.

Yeah, kinda new-agey... That & a full freezer go a long way toward feeling like one has accomplished something of great worth to the family/tribe/community.

L
 
I saw my Dad use a .22 for the first time when I was five, just home from kindergarden. He shot a gopher that moved into our unlandscaped front yard. I was amazed at this tool he used that flipped that poor little bugger out of the hole and made it lay so still. I've never been the same.

Even a year before that, we stayed at my Grandparents house while Dad built the house. His No1 MKIII leaned up against the woodbox all the time. I would sit across from it and marvel at the numbers on the sight and how the wood was made to fit the metal so tight. It is like I was there yesterday, even tho it is over 27 years ago. Grampa was in the war and saw too much of what they could do, boy I got a tongue lashing for just looking at it! Then there were the Cooey's I would stare at while witrh Grampa in his little workshop. They were stashed behind a work bench but I could see them and dreamt of how they worked and what they had been used for.

Grampa would tell me about Gramma's brother, who was responsible for putting food on the table, even as a very young boy. He was sent out to the bush with 3 .22 cartridges and boy he had better come back with either three things to eat or unspent "shells" or there would be consequences. He went on to say how Leif was a crackshot and told me how he would line up the iron sights before they were even on his quarry, and squeeze off the round an instant before the sights crossed the bullseye, that way there was no shaking trying to hold steady. He also shared some about basic training at Camp Borden in Ontario before Grampa went to France.

A little boy cannot listen to much of that sort of stuff without being impacted in a big way. In a positive way I mean too. As much as Grampa hated guns from the war and did his best to avoid me having anything to do with it, well I found a couple .22 longs in his house and eventually found Dad's hiding place for his Anshutz. After kindergarden I took it out and very carefully loaded it and shot a big tree. I knew I had to be careful because this gun could topple a cow or so Grampa had told me!

That tree dies with one well placed shot and back to the house I went a changed boy. Mom of course heard the shot but felt it better for Dad to do the talking when he got home from work. It was a gentle but very serious conversation. The gun was hidden as was any ammo at either household and a Daisy Red Ryder showed up with a Norwegian Elk Hound for Christmas that year.

That dog and little boy wreaked havoc on a half section of property from that day foreward. I never spent much time with my folks growing up so I chose hunting as much as it chose me. The Good Lord knows I get my priorities mixed up more often than not when it comes to family and my hunting. It has always been my safe haven, a solstice if you will when I need to get away. I know of nothing that can take the place of what I've known for so long.

Well, the kids are screaming upstairs and so is Mommy, speaking of priorities, they are calling now........
 
Hi:
Either go out and enjoy nature, watching wildlife and birds in the still and quite of the dense forest - basking in the beauty of the sunrise and sunset.... or .... do scrap booking, knitting, taxes or watch another reality show on TV.

There is really no comparison. If someone doesn't understand - they haven't experienced the peace and serenity of hunting (with sudden burst of adrenalin, excitement, terror and an occasional oh S$!%).
KB.:D
 
Good story Noel. Sounds like your grampa, shared some with mine. Except mine was in WWI, and when I messed with his guns, I got the razor strap on my backside.

Thanks John Y.

It is funny you mention messing with guns, all the time I was growing up if there was a gun in someones house, I would study it, not to mention how it sat in it's position. If the grownups left, you can bet where Noely was in an instant, getting a self taught lesson on a new gun! Some I would only hold for a second and put back the exact way they were and then sit on the opposite side of the house, :p. Others as I learned more would get the action cycled or my best friends and I would sneak them out while their parents went for a load of hay....not good! Kid's were different in those days, we didn't see all this crap on TV that shows killing as nothing to be worried about. We'd kill a tree and stash the gun again, what a thrill.

If any kid is reading this blabbering, do yourself a favor if you have an interest in firearms. Ask your folks for the proper instruction. The way I did it was real crazy looking back. And besides, shooting with an experienced person will likely mean you get to shoot alot more!;)

Anyway, sorry for the thread curb. I guess you could say hunting is in my blood. I have done it for 85% of my life so far, why quit a great thing! LOL
The only thing I would do different is get born a century or so sooner so I could have done it with my Gramma's generation. Yup, I am nutz!:redface:
 
I hunt because I'm a hunter. It's what I am, and what I was born to be. Some humans are gatherers, some are hunters, most are scavengers content to live on the hunting and gathering of others. I know who I am, and that's enough.
 
Noel

Alot like me.. BUt I may have been badder.....:evil:


Not to worry, I edited the bad stuff out too! :p

Let's just say those "Boom........CRACK!" shotgun shells you used to get are great for blowing birdhouses to splinters!
I'm not proud of alot of the things I did growing up but hey what do you expect when you are unsupervised and 12 years old! :D
 
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