Forkyfinder
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2023
- Messages
- 5,104
The issue isnt inherently with R3 - its a failure of agencies and legislatures.People quit hunting d/t lack of access to quality opportunities. You recruit one new hunter, you push another one out. Build it any they will come. Habitat, new access to public parcels builds opportunity and new hunters fill the void. Anecdotally I’ve talked w/ dozens of former hunters and it is the same story over and over again: I lost access, I lost access, I lost access. Maybe 1 in 10 has a different reason.
R3 was well-intentioned at the outset, but it has been entirely hijacked by the outdoor industry. They want new hunters to buy their gear and services. It is generally irrelevant to them if these newcomers have access to quality hunting opportunities.
Kind of like ESA, R3 has long since migrated away from its original function. I took R3 for granted for a long time - of course we need more advocates….right? But having 10% or 20% more hunters doesn’t accomplish much. In broad strokes, if there are 14M hunters in the US, 20% more is 16.8M, all squeezed into a shrinking box. Something like 85% of Americans are in support of hunting for food - 275 million non-hunters.
It seems like recruiting this block to our values has a lot more opportunity. Things like pushing for all images of killed animals off SM platforms, condemning hunting personalities who break the law and have terrible ethics. Millions of Americans have no clue about wanton waste laws - they think we just kill things for fun, and don’t actually eat game animals. Seems like a huge untapped opportunity to me.
Or perhaps wins from special interest.
There were efforts to limit NR bird hunters, but intervention and gaslighting occured.
