Yeti GOBOX Collection

PETA Unhappy with Girl Scouts

BHR

New member
Joined
Oct 11, 2003
Messages
307
Location
T Falls, MT
Girl Scouts trap beaver, anger activists
Wednesday, November 12, 2003



ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -- Let other Girl Scouts make bird feeders out of Clorox bottles and glue together little birch-bark canoes -- Troop 34 in Alaska is learning to trap and skin beavers.

In a practice that has angered animal rights activists, the girls are killing the beavers as part of a state flood-management program.

"We think it sends a very, very bad message that when animals cause a problem you kill them," said Stephanie Boyles of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. She said the Girl Scouts should want girls to become "stewards of wildlife, not abusers."

Last spring, about 10 members of the Fairbanks troop and their families helped catch two beavers using snare and lethal traps. The girls were taught how to find the animals' dens and how to lay the traps. Working under close supervision, the girls used knives to skin the beavers.

The troop had the pelts tanned and plans to make hats and mittens once a dozen hides are collected. The girls also want to cook beaver meat.

They plan to begin setting traps out again this month.

Alaska Girl Scout leaders said they know of no other troop in the country to take part in such a program.

State-offered invitation
Officials at the Girl Scouts' New York headquarters did not return repeated calls. But in a September 16 letter to PETA, spokeswoman Courtney Shore said the organization does not promote trapping or hunting and does not offer merit badges for those activities.

Shore noted that Troop 34, made up of 13 girls ages 10 to 12, participated after an invitation from the state Department of Fish and Game.

"It is understandable why the troop responded positively when approached by a state authority to conduct an activity that is commonplace in that area of the country," Shore wrote.

The state-run Take a Kid Trapping program is aimed at controlling flooding and other damage caused by an increasing number of beavers along the lower Chena River in Fairbanks. It is open to kids as young as 7.

Alaska scout leaders said the program is a "non-issue" in Fairbanks, where trapping has a long history.

Alaskan heritage
Troop 34 leader Dona Boylan said she wanted to impart lessons in responsible game management to Troop 34's members, who are city girls, at least by Alaska's standards. Fairbanks is a city of nearly 30,000.

"Trapping may not be pretty, but the girls understand the seriousness and huge responsibility of taking a life," Boylan said. "They understand that when humans impact their environment, they become ultimately responsible for maintaining a healthy population of the animals they have to coexist with in these urban centers."

Girl Scout leaders said none of the girls would talk to The Associated Press.

"I feel like PETA doesn't have a concept that trapping is considered a heritage here in Alaska," said Mike McDougall, a trapper who worked with the scouts. "These kids are learning more than just how to take an animal. They're learning about ecology. They also got a definite sense of respect for the animals."

The program is helping to curb a burgeoning population of the large rodents, which in Alaska can weigh up to 70 pounds. Their growing numbers are attributed to recent warm winters and a drop in commercial trapping.

"Beavers are a valuable source of education for our young people," said Tom Seaton, a Fish and Game biologist. "Their carcasses can used in many ways -- for food, for warm garments.

Almost everything about beavers is good except when they flood your yard or knock down live trees."

<FONT COLOR="#800080" SIZE="1">[ 11-12-2003 13:31: Message edited by: BHR ]</font>
 
Does anyone care what PETA thinks? I sure dont.

Its great they're learning to trap...a lost art for sure and it isnt as easy as stringing steel all over the place.
 
Thats awsome! PETA needs to get a clue.

Speaking of trapping rodents. I friend of mine has traps set in his back yard for sqrirrle... I know, I know... But anyway, he has a live trap set up infront of a rat trap... I asked him about it and he said if the little bastards get by the live trap on the way to the house they deserved to die, and if the get hit by the rat trap on the way from the house they were just lucky the first time... It was pretty funny, he kills them even if he catches them in the live trap anyway, he said he likes to let them think about what they have done
rolleyes.gif


Ivan
 
I wish we had that program around here to teach the kids these arts of woodlore. PETA members need to get a life.
 
Buzz,

You ought to be concerned about what PETA thinks if you want to continue to hunt, trap, and fish in the future. Maybe they don't care about what you think but they sure care what todays youth think. Put out movies with talking pigs and other such emotional garbage, and more and more of our future is being won over by PETA.

A good case in point is a political cartoon in the Missoulian a couple weeks ago. It was drawn by a 7th grade student. First picture was a beautiful forest scene with a happy squirrel in it. Second frame was nothing but stumps. In the left corner was Bush's head saying "healthy forests". In the right corner was a gun barrel going off. In the center of the frame was a dead squirrel in a pool of blood.

This political cartoon was well done by anybodies standards, let alone a 7th grade girl. She sucessfully attacked President Bush, logging, guns, and hunting, all in one fell swoop. Never mind that it was all propoganda. It occupied half a page of the Sunday paper.

What is really scary is what our impressionable youth are thinking, and where they are coming up with these ideas. PETA is definately making an impact.

Paul
 
Paul, PETA doesnt have a shred of credibility, its one thing the media has done right...that being slamming them on their ridiculous campaigns.

Oh, and if you're worried about propoganda, you'd better start worrying about the constant barrage coming from the whitehouse...they've done more to harm wildlife, hunting, fishing, trapping, and the environment than PETA ever will...in particular the current dude who occupies the whitehouse and his cronies.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
111,060
Messages
1,945,442
Members
35,001
Latest member
samcarp
Back
Top