idelkslayer
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2013
- Messages
- 299
To further agree and expand on both of your comments. One thing that "hunting with a camera" cannot replace is reaching into my freezer and pulling out a white package of meat. Hunting is camping, hiking, sight seeing, landscape photography, marksmanship, killing, backpacking, butchering, meat processing, cooking, and eating all wrapped up into one activity that can span the entire year. Without the harvest I miss out on a significant portion of whole activity. One thing that other outdoor enthusiasts and especially antihunters that love the outdoors don't understand in the connection to the landscape and animal that comes from knowing that you are feeding your body from those landscapes and animals. For those of us who are religious it goes further and connects us directly to creation and the God who put it here in a way that isn't replicated by the meat aisle in the grocery store. How do you put a price on that?Nicely said and couldn't agree more.
No offense taken what so ever. Shooting a deer from my deck is work, not hunting. Even if I bow hunt from one of my stands, same sediment. The thought in my head when I draw back is "man this now means some work" rather than an adrenaline rush like it should. It is absolutely why I explore elsewhere.
That said, one tag doesn't take away my ability to hunt for the year. I wouldn't fault anyone who looked at this opportunity and thought they could do more for their family with the money than they can with the 40 lbs of bear meat. There have been times in my life where $2000 would make a big difference, whereas it would take more than that to tempt me now.