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Started by Happy, March 07, 2019, 10:44:02 AM
Quote from: Happy on March 07, 2019, 10:44:02 AMBeen mulling over the trends in hunting and wonder what others opinions are. A: Are we loosing the skills and effort required to become good hunters by substituting technology, as well as new practices such as food plots and feeders.B: All this good and wonderful because it is helping recruit new hunters and makes hunting more enjoyable.I really don't care what others do as it has no bearing on my life but I feel a stronger draw to option A.
Quote from: RutnNStrutn on March 07, 2019, 01:27:55 PMPersonally gentlemen, I think way too many of you put way too much emphasis on being anti-anything that is new. I don't agree with the holier than thou attitude that traditional hunting is good, and anything else is bad philosophy. That's why I avoid a lot of topics that involve new technology or new techniques. I know what's coming in those threads.bbcoach is correct. Hunting is under attack like never before, and with the millenial generation coming up not wanting anything to do with guns, hunting or eating wild game, the future of hunting is indeed in jeopardy. With that in mind, we are our own worst enemies. We fight and argue about traditional vs new, 10 vs 12 vs 20 vs 410 gauges, longbow vs recurve vs compound vs crossbow, dog hunting vs still hunting, hunting raw woods vs baiting vs food plots, scent control vs none, TSS vs Hevishot vs lead, decoys vs no decoys vs reaping, legal vs ethical, etc, etc, etc, ad nauseum. We the hunting community are shooting ourselves right in the proverbial foot with all this nonsense. Personally, I say, if it is legal (which is completely different than ethical, because everyone's ethics are different), and you want to do it, then GO FOR IT!!! That doesn't mean I agree with it, or that I would hunt that way, but I support your right to hunt in any LEGAL manner that you choose. That is what ALL of us should do if we love and support our sport of hunting.
Quote from: Happy on March 08, 2019, 06:47:52 AMI will argue the food plot thing a little bit. I have heard the premise of it helps the overall health of game animals and quite frankly I don't see it. Anytime you draw animals in and overpopulate the carrying capacity of the land its bad. I think far more damage than good is accomplished. I do believe improving natural habitat is good but that's about it. I guess to me I see the bottom line as being that most want to keep all the game animals to themselves and that wrong also. It's hurts the animals and it hurts hunting. Nothing can be effectively managed if it's stockpiled on someone's private preserve. And this is not jealousy speaking If I wanted to feed animals I would but I don't see long term benefit to it and I like the critters I kill to be organic and not full of GMO corn like most cattle. It's kinda like the fellow that claims he is only hunting "mature" deer only to pass on a 5 year old buck because he had a busted tine. It's pretty easy to see what he is truly after. And that's fine just don't call it something it isnt.
Quote from: Happy on March 07, 2019, 10:44:02 AMA: Are we loosing the skills and effort required to become good hunters by substituting technology, as well as new practices such as food plots and feeders.
Quote from: Happy on March 07, 2019, 10:44:02 AMB: All this good and wonderful because it is helping recruit new hunters and makes hunting more enjoyable.
Quote from: shaman on March 08, 2019, 07:51:38 AMQuote from: Happy on March 08, 2019, 06:47:52 AMI will argue the food plot thing a little bit. I have heard the premise of it helps the overall health of game animals and quite frankly I don't see it. Anytime you draw animals in and overpopulate the carrying capacity of the land its bad. I think far more damage than good is accomplished. I do believe improving natural habitat is good but that's about it. I guess to me I see the bottom line as being that most want to keep all the game animals to themselves and that wrong also. It's hurts the animals and it hurts hunting. Nothing can be effectively managed if it's stockpiled on someone's private preserve. And this is not jealousy speaking If I wanted to feed animals I would but I don't see long term benefit to it and I like the critters I kill to be organic and not full of GMO corn like most cattle. It's kinda like the fellow that claims he is only hunting "mature" deer only to pass on a 5 year old buck because he had a busted tine. It's pretty easy to see what he is truly after. And that's fine just don't call it something it isnt.The long term benefit to the hunter from a food plot is that you end up with a few more birds, and the flocks remain fairly stable. For the birds themselves, having a food plot or two around buffers the birds from the boom and bust that nature usually presents. Around our place, we have cicadas-- at least 2 major broods. When there is a cicada brood emerging, a bunch of things happen:1) More poults survive, because in the critical May/June time frame, they have this mass of big bugs to eat.2) The cicadas prune the oak trees. Usually this means the acorn crop goes bust that fall.3) The pruning causes more new growth in the oak trees, so the next year sees an acorn boom.By having alternatives around the turkey numbers stay much more constant. That whole boom/bust things resonates for years. Some years, there seem to be no hens. Other years, there seems to be no gobblers. One year we had a plague of Jakes. Another year, we had so many 2 yr olds that they went gay on us. They stayed in single-sex flocks and would only display for each other and chased off all the hens. Probably all of these things trace back to the two cicada emergences that happen about 7-8 years apart around here.Having good habitat management alleviates at least some of the pressures. Food plots are just one of the tools. Mind you, none of this involved hunting over food plots. The plots help out pre- and post- season.
Quote from: Happy on March 08, 2019, 11:59:47 AMI think people are kind of loosing the premise of the conversation. This isn't about right or wrong or judgement. It is simply this. Are we replacing skill and hunting ability with technology and is modern hunting a good thing moving forward?