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Conference vmsnet::hunting$note:hunting

Title:The Hunting Notesfile
Notice:Registry #7, For Sale #15, Success #270
Moderator:SALEM::PAPPALARDO
Created:Wed Sep 02 1987
Last Modified:Tue Jun 03 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1561
Total number of notes:17784

544.0. "Is hunting worth the hassle?" by HAZEL::LEFEBVRE (I'd rather be hunting) Thu Nov 09 1989 12:26

    What does everyone think about my "incident" yesterday?
    
    I was hunting my favorite spot in Durham with my usual hunting buddy.
    My buddy is heading upstate this weekend, and had a friend with
    him.  Surprise!  :*(
    
    About 9 AM, his buddy jumps two good-size deer and we formulate
    a plan to intercept them before they cross the access road.  About
    10 minutes into the push, I hear a shot ring out from my left. 
    MY friend is on the right, and his friend in on my left.  I hear
    a thud (sound of something hitting the ground), so I holler over
    to him "Did you get 'im?" (thinking he shot one of the deer).
    
    He hollers "Yup, but he's not a deer".
    
    Well, as soon as I walk over to him he holds up a porcupine and
    proudly says "this is the first time I ever shot slugs from this
    20 gauge and I couldn't pass up an easy shot."  He shot the porcupine
    while it was treed.
    
    Well, not knowing this guy too well, I didn't say anything.  As
    I walked away shaking my head I passed my buddy who was approaching
    the scene.  I said to him, "I'm taking a walk" and that's the last
    time these two guys saw me until dark.
    
    1. What ever possesses someone to shoot at other game while on a
    hot deer trail?  When I hunt deer, I hunt deer.  If I'm on the way
    back to camp after a long day and I see a grouse or a snow-shoe
    hare (ie, something edible), I may take a shot, but certainly not
    while I'm working with other hunters on a hot trail.  Especially
    after we put together a plan to do so.
    
    2. He just left the carcass there.  Why shoot an animal when you
    have no purpose for it?  Sounds like a waste to me.
    
    I was so aggravated it ruined my whole day.  I haven't spoken with
    my friend yet, but suffice it to say he'll get an earful about bringing
    his buddy along.  Afterall, I discovered the area and chose to show
    my friend.  
    
    I'm really at a point when I'm ready to say "screw it" and put the
    gun away.  It seems every year something like this happens that
    overshadows all the pleasant memories of the year's hunt.  Is it
    really worth the aggravation?

    Seriously bumming on the eve of my trip to Maine.
    
    Mark.
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544.1Porky's have built-in toothpicks.GOTHIC::POPIENIUCKThu Nov 09 1989 12:5724
    Two comments.  First, your friend's buddy is *NOT* a hunter and owes
    you both an apology and if he's ever to "hunt" with you again.
    (Assuming you'll have him.)  My other comment is that I would have
    asked him how he intended to cook that porcupine and what they taste
    like.  Another case of where a non-thinking person (I'm resisting
    using the word jerk.) gives all hunters a bad name.
    
    Making the comment about how he intended to cook it would have really
    put him on the spot and unless he's a total idiot, made him do some
    thinking.
    
    The rule my brother and I follow when we hunt is we a.) don't shoot at
    anything we won't eat, and b.) won't shoot at ANYTHING else if we are
    deer hunting.  We didn't get a deer this year, but we did see some, saw
    a red fox, couple moose, snowshoe hare, many partridge, and they are
    all still alive and kicking.  No wasted corpses littering the woods.
    
    Too bad.  I'd check with your buddy though.  If he wasn't aware of this
    guy's ethics in hunting, then he might also feel as you do.  Good
    hunting partners are hard to find.  (My brother went with me this year
    cast and all.  He broke his leg two weeks before the season opened, but
    he INSISTED we go.  We didn't do much swamping and I only made him
    climb one mountain ;^} ).
    
544.2porkys taste greateFSCORE::KAYEHe who dies with the most toys is deadThu Nov 09 1989 13:003
A friend of mine says porcupines are great eating.

 mark
544.3GIAMEM::J_AMBERSONThu Nov 09 1989 13:0711
      First shooting a porky is a waste.  When i was a kid I shot one
    and brought it home to show my Grandfather.  He went nuts!  After
    he stopped yelling he explained that a porky is one of the few animals
    that an unarmed man kill in the woods.  I guess that oldtimers
    considured them a kind of survival animal in that if you were lost
    you could always eat a porky.  But this is besides the point.
      Once you find a hunting partner who you trust and like your a
    very lucky person.  They are hard to come by.  Don't give up though
    cause you'll miss some great times.
    
    Jeff
544.4It is worth it!CSCMA::D_DYERDENNIS M. DYERThu Nov 09 1989 13:2913
    Mark,
    I've encountered a very similar circumstance.  While hunting in
    "hot pursuit" with a new hunting aquaintance and his son, the new
    "aquaintance" (to impress his marksmanship upon his son) blew away
    a snowshoe to the point of being inedible.  Needless to say the
    both the "hot pursuit" and the afternoon were lost.  Saving the
    afternoon, I took the son snowshoe hunting, exhibited two clean
    kills, and (I think) taught a lesson.
    Bottom line is is that I have hunted with the son four times since
    but not the "new aquaintance".  Despite - IT IS WORTH IT!  Win one
    good hunter loose one bad.
    
    Squire Dyer
544.5SA1794::TENEROWICZTThu Nov 09 1989 14:3412
    
    	There is absolutely no reason to allow your buddies "friend"
    to rein your hunting. I'd have to agree that your buddy "if he
    really is a buddy" deserves to be talked to. I mean talk. Not yell.
    If he's a buddy tell him that his friend is not wanted. If he can't
    take the message then he probably wasn't a buddy after all. If he's
    a buddy to be valued then he's take the message and still be your
    buddy. 
    	
    
    
    						Tom
544.6words of a vt farmer: their useless crittersKNGBUD::LAFOSSEThu Nov 09 1989 14:3914
    mark, forget about it and head for Maine and have a great time...
    when you come back you'll be clear headed enough to forget your remark
    about putting the gun away for the remainder... Its always worth the 
    hassle!
    
    On the subject of porqupines, the farmer where we hunt has insisted
    that we take out any and all porkys we see, as their eating all the
    bark off his sugar maples (his livlyhood come spring) and consequently
    killing them. They only have one natural enemy (the fisher), and there
    seems to be an over abundance of porkys and not many fishers.
    Didn't realize they were edible, see you learn something new everyday.
    
    Fra
    
544.7WAHOO::LEVESQUEDelivering the goodsThu Nov 09 1989 16:0411
 Mark-

 The problem is that you're hunting with the wrong people. :-)/2

 I don't blame you for being a little PO at the guy. I would've said something.
(Never could control my tongue.)

 Don't despair. Have fun in Maine. Maybe we can get out when you come back.
(And you can show me pictures of the monster you took in Maine).

 The Doctah
544.8They're everywhere....BTOVT::MORONGFri Nov 10 1989 08:4432
      Reminds me of what happened to my hunting party about 5 years
    ago. My brother-in-law hit a large buck, and was tracking it. There
    was snow on the ground and the blood was obvious. He tracked for about
    2 hours, had caught glimpses of the deer, but never had a real clear
    shot. Then he looks up ahead and there was someone else picking up
    the track. The lets me brother-in-law catch up, and it turns out to be
    someone he knows from his home town. The guy decided that he would 
    "help" me brother-in-law, so he heads off down the ridge a bit, off to
    his left. The only trouble was that he kept getting ahead and closer
    to my brother-in-law. Then my b-i-l sees this guy pull up and shoot.
    Damn, he shot my deer!!! B-i-l runs over to where this guy is, only to
    find out he has shot a porcupine. Hot on the trail of a wounded deer,
    and this idiot shoots a porcupine!!! B-i-l figured the deer was long
    gone after that, and since it was close to dark, he didn't figure to 
    get close enough to the deer now before dark. He heads down the ridge
    to an old dirt road, and starts heading back to the car (the porcupine
    shooter stayed on the deers track). He figured to go back in the morn-
    ing to pick up the track again.
    
      The story does have a happy ending though. As brother-in-law is
    walking down the road (gun unloaded), the sees something coming down
    the ridge, heading for the road. It was the same deer. Apparently he
    doubled back after the a$$h**e shot the porcupine, and crossed the
    road right in front of my b-i-l. Quickly loaded his gun (after getting
    off the road) and dropped the deer as he was jumping a stone wall, just
    before going out of sight. Ran up to the spot and there it was, dead as
    a stone. 8-pointer 205lbs. Not bad for a VT deer. ;-) 
    
      The deer now hangs over his fireplace. A beautiful mount, 19" spread
    on the rack. 
    
    -Ron-
544.9heck, maybe you should have SHOT the guy!WAV14::HICKSLive Free or Live in MassachusettsMon Nov 13 1989 14:3825
    .0 (and others)
    
    Have any of you folks EVER done anything dumb in your lives?  I
    didn't think so.  You're probably too dumb to realize how dumb you
    can be.
    
    OK!! OKAY!!  I'm being harsh.  But isn't it just possible
    that if the young idiot who shot the porky were shown the error
    of his ways, maybe he'd LEARN FROM HIS MISTAKES!!  (Now there's
    a novel thought!)
    
    Seriously folks.  I love hunting, and I hope I never get to the
    place where I can't learn something new.  But I can relate to this
    guy.  My father hated hunting.  I was never taught hunting ethics.
    I've never done anything like this guy, but, like most folks, I
    admit to the possibility that I could make a mistake.  I think that's
    true of most folks.
    
    Does everyone else feel the same way?  Should this guy be summarily
    written-off, banned from friendship and any hope of hunting with
    folks who might show him the ropes?  Isn't it just possible that
    instead of writing this poor slob off, he could be enlightened,
    and turned into a first-class hunter?
    
    <<< Tim >>>
544.10I agree with the .9 approachDECWET::HELSELLegitimate sporting purposeTue Nov 14 1989 12:1711
    re : .9
    
    Well stated.  My thoughts exactly.  Rather than lose control of
    the situation, educate the hunter.  If you don't, who will?
    
    Otherwise, he may never learn and he'll probably screw up someone
    else's hunt.
    
    Peer pressure works.  
    
    /brett
544.11eat it rawSALEM::MACGREGORI&#039;m the NRA/GONH/NAHCWed Nov 15 1989 09:413
    re .2 I have been told that a porcupine is about the only animal
    one can eat without cooking it. Great for survival if one gets lost.
    							bret
544.12Barbecued Porky LegsDNEAST::AVERELL_MICHThu Nov 16 1989 07:4522
    First of all I would not shoot a porcupine while on a fresh deer trail
    or during a planned hunt with others.
    
    However, I do not hesitate to shoot one while hunting on my own.
    
    Porcupines are to tree farmers as woodchucks are to land farmers,
    destructive pests.  They eat the bark off trees, often scarfing and 
    killing them.  They reproduce quickly, having litters twice a year.
    
    The owner of the land that I hunt on once offered me a bounty to shoot
    as many porcupines as I could, it paid for my hunting/fishing license
    and ammunition.
    
    I too have been told, by my grandfather, that porcupines are good
    eating.  So, I once skinned one out thinking that I would eat it,
    but after an hour of quills in my gloves I discovered that the only
    parts with any meat on them were the legs and I had lost my appetite.
    
    So, next time I have a hankering for porcupine I'll take the legs and
    leave the rest.
    
    Bon-appetite