T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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284.1 | Close, but no cigar.... | POBOX::WILSON | Must wear many hats..... | Thu Nov 17 1988 17:31 | 5 |
| I haven't seen or heard of anyone doing so. Although it doesn't
suprise me that someone would do it. The closest thing to this
that I have come across is one of my relatives uses an AR15 during
his annual deer hunt.
|
284.2 | Opinions | DECWET::HELSEL | I'm the NRA | Thu Nov 17 1988 19:39 | 11 |
| What do you think of guys that go deer hunting with AR15's and the
like?
Is this a reasonable firearm for deer hunting?
Do you take your safety off if you see a guy coming up to you in
the woods with an assault gun with a paratrooper folding stock?
Just curious.
Brett.
|
284.4 | Not completely true | DECWET::HELSEL | I'm the NRA | Fri Nov 18 1988 12:21 | 9 |
| re: .3
Many "military weapons" are available in other calibers like
the NATO .308 round
The saftey line is semi-tongue_in_cheek.
Brett.
|
284.5 | | PATOIS::KEYES | | Fri Nov 18 1988 14:34 | 28 |
| Personally, I think using something like an Ar15 for thew purpose
of Deer hunting is something I wouldn't do but I know of one individual
who hunts in Maine with one and does pretty good with it over the
last couple of years. He feels that for foul weather, because of
the weapon proving itself by not jamming, and the speed of pulling
the trigger, is great stuff for the Maine swamps when you jump um.
I guess if I was a person who did not hunt and seen someone walk
by with An Ar15, I would basicly question it or at least make a
comment. If we start thinking about what we should ban or ok,
because of the looks of a weapon and the looks of the hunter in
dressup and what we use for a weapon and how we dress, and of
course under the state laws its all legal,, we could be opening
a can of worms. In every sport, you have the 10% that go over-
board and I've seen an individual in Vermont at one time come
over a ridge with a bandelier loaded with 458 cal bullets and
and of cource the weapon. Being somewhat out spoken at times
I preceeded to explain to him that I was under the assumption
that they didn't stock elephant this year. He proceeded to tell
me that he was using a 30-06 up until last year and he hit
a big bugger and that it got away and that if he seen it this year
it wouldn't have a chance and I indeed believed him as he proceeded
to walk up the mountain. Through the season while sitting on
my stand I've consistantly throught of this gentlemen and wondered
if he ever got his quarry, cause I never heard him fire off a round
and I never felt the ground tremble after the shoot.
Stan
|
284.7 | Greed Hunters Are The Worse | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Mon Nov 21 1988 08:10 | 13 |
| Well, these guys are not new. Their the same guys I used to see
up at the sportsmens club dressed like they just came out of the
Jerimia Johnson movie. Now their dressed like Rambo. The thing
is most of them don't do much hunting. They hang around the gun
clubs and talk about hunting and shooting, but being dreamers they
don't do much other than talk. The guy's I worry about are the die
hard hunters. The ones that getting the game is the only thing their
out there for. They become so greedy that they risk people lives
in order to fill their bag. My brother is one, and thats why I don't
hunt with him anymore.
Jim
|
284.8 | Same old stuff | GORT::QUIGLEY | I'm the NRA!! | Mon Nov 21 1988 12:31 | 47 |
|
> On Monday the 14th, the Seattle Times printed an article titled
> "Rambo Hunting". The article described how it is apparently in fasion
> these days to go big game hunting dressed in military garb and packing
> an assault rifle.
"Rambo Hunting" that must be like "Saturday Night Special". It means
something different to everyone.
> The reporter interviewed a few scared people who's common
> consensus was "I'm not taking my family into the woods during this
> time of year, the woods are full of crazies!"
Are they afraid of assault rifles or hunters in general? I'm sure
it's hunters in general.
> Unfortunately, the article also expressed concern in regards
> to restricting hunting with assault rifles and related where
> semi-automatics had been banned; a kind of subjective call to do
> the same here.
AHHHH! Here we go.....the message is these aren't made for hunting,
they're to dangerous and only morons have them, so they should be
banned.
> Has anyone, in their travels through the woods, seen these
> individuals? Do you think that persons expressing their freedom
> to do this in most states will result in us loosing our assault
> and semi-automatic rifle privelidges hunting or totally?
I guess bow hunters would fit this category!!! All the camo and the bow,
just like the Rambo flicks!!!
We all know about the hunter's that just go hunting to party and are out
there stoned. There aren't alot of them but they stick in your mind when
you see or hear them. What this article tries to create is an image of the
worst type of hunter you can imagine and then it puts an assault rifle in
their hands and says they're spraying the woods, so that even the safe hunters
aren't safe. A bolt action rifle or shotgun in the hands of a ignorant
person will kill you just as dead.
I didn't read this article but read the same type of article every year.
Same old story.....and the bottom line is let's ban something and make us
all safer. I wouldn't mind if a hunter or firearms owner wrote it, then I'd
know they were just ignorant. Usually the writer tends to be anti gun period
and that tells me everything.
|
284.9 | More fuel for the anti's in here | VICKI::DODIER | | Tue Nov 22 1988 11:16 | 36 |
| About the only thing that I think of if I see a person in armed
forces fatigues and an assault rifle is that they either are in
or were in the service, or they know somebody that is. Not to say
that this is the case and that there aren't "RAMBO" types out there,
it's just not the first thing that comes to mind.
If I were in the military and used an AR15 often, I'd see a very
practical side to being set up like the so called "RAMBO" look-alike.
For example:
1. The camo would be available at a low/reasonable cost and
you know what the quality is like. For rifle season a blaze orange
vest, hat, and gloves could be added.
2. The AR15 may be the gun that you shoot most often and therefore
you are most comfortable and proficient with it. It is also very
accurate and capable of taking a deer with.
3. You may have access to ammo through the military at a lower
than usual cost and/or a higher than usual quality.
I see these as 3 good reasons for the RAMBO look.
I also think it's sad when even other hunters start making comments
and display preconceived notions about a fellow hunter because of
their dress and gun choice. To me, if the clothing keeps you warm
and/or dry and your gun is familiar, capable, and safe, that's all
that matters. I'm trying very hard at this point not to add emotion to
this but........GGGGGRRRRRRRrrrrrrr THIS IS NOT A DAMN FASHION CONTEST.
It's not hard to see why the anti-gun people have the "always
think the worst" type of mentality of hunters after reading some of
the replies in this notes file.
RAYJ
|
284.10 | I like 'em | PUGET::BROWN | Dave Brown | Wed Nov 23 1988 11:23 | 21 |
|
If .9 was directed at me...
I do hunt deer with an assault rifle. I think that they are
great for the purpose. We have a lot of heavy brush around here
and one may not get a second shot with a bolt action rifle.
Re: Camos; The ONLY reason that I don't wear them too is that
I like to be seen. If there wasn't that safety issue involved, I
would probably be exactly like the hunters that were described in
the article.
Re:.8; What the article indicated that the populous was afraid
of was the scenario of taking the family out for a nice sedate drive
in the country and have a guy dressed like there was a war on jump
out on the road in front of them.
Additionally, the article stated concern on the part of the
Fish and Game officials who were allowed to carry only a revolver
and felt quite out-gunned.
|
284.11 | accuracy beats firepower | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Thu Jan 12 1989 14:29 | 9 |
| I believe one of the ammo companies (Federal?) is coming out
with a heavy (70 gr. or so) softpoint specifically for deer
hunting with a .223. I'd still prefer a heavier bullet, but
ya dance with who ya brung, as they say.
I'd feel a bit leery about a "hunter" with two thirty-round
mags 'jungle-clipped', tho'.
Dana
|
284.12 | Clothes don't make the ..... | ATEAM::AYOTTE | | Fri May 12 1989 14:27 | 25 |
| I could be mistaken but in the Rambo movies that I saw wasn't
"the hero" wearing burlap bags or black fatigues? I have always
worn camos (orange vest added when needed) and never though much
about it looking macho. The stuff is just plain practical. Price,
pockets, etc., can't be beat. Since the AF switched over to camo
utilities my lifer brother takes good care of me.
As far as firearms go.... in the states that I'm familiar with
it could be illegal to hunt deer with one of those "sandpit sporters"
for one or more of the following reasons:
PA - No semi-automatic actions allowed
WA - .243 is minimum for deer (I know that 7.62 is OK)
CT - Rifles illegal on State game lands (OK on private land)
MA - No rifles allowed
NH - 5 shot max in a semi-auto
VT - Same as NH (I believe)
Anyway, so much for the "rambo" look. My personal belief is that
a .223 is too light for northern Whitetails and until they design
an appropriate bullet (one that expands at lower velocities) I
don't think much of the 7.62 x 39mm.
Dave
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