Showing posts with label Hunting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hunting. Show all posts

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Addendum to GOAL Post 2016-5

I didn't want to make more than my usual typography/spelling/formatting changes to the original of GOAL Post 2016-5 to incorporate this addendum, so here it is as a separate post, in it's entirety. The only modification is the bold typeface to emphasize the hearing information.
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FROM: GOAL WA
TO: undisclosed-recipients:
SENT: Sat 2/6/2016 7:57 PM
SUBJECT: GOAL Post 2016-5 Addendum
6 February 2016
House Bill 2325, by Rep. Dick Muri (R-28), a bill that would create an elective hunter education/firearms safety course in high schools, failed to pass out of the House Education Committee by yesterday’s policy committee cut-off.  The bill is essentially dead for this session.

In a late addition to next week’s schedule, Rep, Muri has arranged for a “courtesy hearing” on the bill by the House Education Committee in House Hearing Room “A,” John L. O’Brien Office Building at 8:30 a.m. on Thursday, 11 February.  WDFW Hunter Ed officials will be there as will several state-certified hunter education instructors. 

If you can attend the hearing, please try to do so.  A hunter ed/firearm safety course in our high schools would go a long way to counter the anti-gun indoctrination and misinformation that fills classrooms today.  A strong showing of support will help get this bill a hearing in the next legislative session.

Saturday, August 1, 2015

QOTD, 08/01/2015

I actually saw this yesterday, but I already had a QOTD for yesterday, so it got deferred to today.

At what Tamara likes to refer to as "An away game", and while discussing the Cecil The Lion "scandal", which in the way of these things devolved into a free range discussion of hunting, and what was Right And Proper and Pure, and What Was Evil and Wrong And Bad, David S. observed
How is it that so many of us in the gun community, who distrust the "liberal media," are so willing to accept this story at face value?
I've never been on an African "Safari"1. If I had the money for same, I'd probably invest half and spend the rest on an Alaska hunt instead.

So here's what I know from talking about it with people who have been on Shikar2:
  • You pays your money, you hires the Professional Hunter and his staff.
  • The PH takes you around, and tells you when and where and which animal to shoot.
  • That makes you the sport, not the, or a, "hunter."
  • You have the option of paying "trophy fees" and getting a mount of the head.
  • The meat is distributed among local communities.
  • Hunting is controversial, especially among those whose knowledge of actual ecology ended at viewing Bambi at a young age.
  • Hunting different from the way you/I do it is also controversial. 
  • Mid-Westerners who "stalk"with a rifle or shotgun are liable to view those who hunt from a stand as some kind of barbarian, regardless of whether hunting from the ground there is practical, or even legal.
  • People who have a scope on their shootin' 'arn feel the same about those without, and vice versa, ditto regarding legality.
  • (EDITED TO ADD:) That goes double for weird styles of hunting involving strings and pointy sticks, guns that load from the front, or guns that look... icky.
  • Also, some idiots are so much more concerned about the fate of a wild (well, semi-wild) animal than the facts that the "sport" in this case has received death threats, and the enlightened government of Zimbabwe (!) is demanding that said "sport" be extradited.
  • Cecil was 13 years old. 
  • The Average Life Span Of A Lion in the wild is 10-14 years.
Clearly, it's time to move to a cave in the mountains with a pile of "dead tree" books and give up on the human race.



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1. Safari: A long overland trip, usually for diplomatic or trading purposes.
2. Shikar: Hunt, hunting.
This pretty much exhausts my knowledge of Swahili.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Any landing you walk away from...

Seen at Pistol Forums.com: Two Live Oak men involved in helicopter crash in St. Lucie County » Local News » Suwannee Democrat
Live Oak — Two Live Oak men were involved in a helicopter crash in St. Lucie County around 9 a.m. Saturday morning, according to the St. Lucie County Sheriff's Office.

Jonathan Strayer, 46, and Massad Ayoob, 64, were treated and released at Raulerson Memorial Hospital in Okeechobee, as was the pilot, William Harward, 55, Miami.
Apparently, Mas posted elsewhere that they were out hunting feral hogs, which is often done from a helicopter, as it is a recognized and effective means of controlling the population of an invasive species which is devastating to agriculture. (The fact that it's fun is a bonus.) Mr Ayoob also posted that the pilot's skill prevented the accident from being worse. There's a reason rotary-wing pilots practice auto-rotation. (I hated auto-rotation practice...)