My dad was my 'Hunter Safety Course.' 'Never point a gun at anything you're not willing to kill! As a kid, playing with cap pistols, wouldn't even point them while playing 'Cowboys and Outlaws.' Thought I was going to say 'Indians' didn't you?! Being part Cherokee, when 'Cowboys and Indians' was suggested, I always took the Indian part. Did takes a 'Hunter Safety Course' once. Walked out after calling the 'State Certified' instructor an ***** and a Menace to Humanity. Why? He kept waving a loaded rifle around, in the direction of those taking the course.I second the hunter safety course. I was a hunter ed instructor for many years. Because some states require completion of a course before out of state hunters can buy licenses, every class had several experienced hunters sitting next to youngsters. Instructors know where to find hunting ground and such as that.
Or ...marry into a family of hunters. We always have some sorta critter chasin' going on. Some are even legal.
I ask rural propane delivery drivers for leads. Be sure to mention the drivers name when you approach the property owner.Hello,
I've been wanting to get into hunting for quite a while now, but I don't know anyone who hunts and it is pretty intimidating to just start doing. I'm looking to hunt hogs, deer and rabbits. Any recommendations for resources? I'm in Cali for reference.
Thanks.
Unless you go around with your arms crossed and a scowl on your face (which I'm certain some do), a hunter's safety course is a great thing. Even a complete ***** can learn if they want to.Your state will have all the information you need to get into hunting.
Get on your state's Department of Natural Resources website. It will spell it out for you. Public hunting land, licenses, hunting seasons, required calibers, muzzle energy, feet per second, everything.
And unless you're a complete ***** or required by the state, hunter safety courses are bureaucratic nonsense. Human beings have been entering the woods and safely killing animals, not harvesting them, for the past 500 years.
How to skin and prepare animals after you kill them, not harvest them, can be found in books or online.
I've never killed deer for sport or for antlers or to brag or to be bragged about.Unless you go around with your arms crossed and a scowl on your face (which I'm certain some do), a hunter's safety course is a great thing. Even a complete ***** can learn if they want to.
I grew up hunting, taught by my father and his father. When I decided to hunt out of state I needed the class. I went in with my eyes open wanting to learn what I could. It was educational and a refresher for things I hadn't heard in decades.
I knew a deer "Killer". He was a cousin of a good friend. He stalked huge bucks, by putting a canoe in the river and drifted until he found a monster. Then when season opened he drifted the river, found one then killed it. He Took it to his barn, guts in, hung it head down and built a small fire. He'd call everyone, drink beer, smoke pot, and brag about what a killer he was for several days while others bragged about him. I offered to gut one, then offered to quarter one, he said no both times.
After it rotted he loaded it in his truck and hauled it down the road. He did that for years. I stopped going to see his "Trophies" after 2 years, but heard about it. I'm happy to say he died at his own hand last year.
When you Harvest an animal you plan to eat it, and/or support your family. Look it up.
I've never killed deer for sport or for antlers or to brag or to be bragged about.
Every deer was eaten. And I didn't smoke weed or drink beer while I processed them.
As for the term Harvested, there is no such thing as Harvested when it comes to animals. It's a silly and childish made-up modern term so the killing of animals didn't sound like the killing animals to the squeamish. The squeamish who think grocery store meat is delivered by meat fairies who wave a magic wand and sprinkle processed meat everywhere. The squeamish who eat chicken and hamburger and bacon and SPAM then look down their enlightened noses at hunters.
Vegetables are Harvested.
Animals are Killed. Even the animals we feed to ourselves and our families.
Boy, “64”, you’re even crustier than normal today; did the corncob go sideways in the outhouse this morning?!? (Said in jest)Kill vs. Harvest: Which Term is Correct?
I mean, I agree. I still think you can be wise about the use of your words and how it can impact thoughts or conversations.Kill vs. Harvest: Which Term is Correct?
By Jessica Manuell / May 3, 2021 / 4 minutes of reading
Sharing is Caring
The word is kill, not harvest.
We do not farm wildlife for the purpose of backing up the slaughter truck and hanging wildlife in a line on hooks and gambrels for mass consumption by the general public.
As much as people would like to think, or call wildlife theirs, it is simply not true. No one “owns” wildlife. And while we hold wildlife in public trust here in the United States under the North American model of wildlife management, they are not, in fact, ours to do with as we please.
When did we become soft? When did we as hunters fall into the trap of pandering to anti-hunters and using terms that do not explain exactly what we do? We kill animals. Period. And even that is still a vague explanation, so let me clarify. When we are successful as a hunter, we kill an animal; otherwise, we are just taking a nature hike and hopefully gaining experience along the way.
Harvest is traditionally a term used in farming. The act of farming yields a renewable product that can be harvested for consumption. Harvest is a result of humans having control of the birth, cultivation, and subsequent harvest of a resource. We do no such things with wildlife. And wildlife do no such thing to each other. The wolf does not harvest the deer, it kills the deer. The wolf does not cultivate it’s prey for the future.
Harvest did not become a term used to describe the killing of an animal until the United States became a politically correct nation in or around the 1960s. And since, the United States has become so politically charged that several state wildlife management agencies have adopted the term into their roles or mission statements.
One is an article, the other is a dictionary. Your choice.Boy, “64”, you’re even crustier than normal today; did the corncob go sideways in the outhouse this morning?!? (Said in jest)
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