Free: Contests & Raffles.
I've got a family member that just came back from a successful New Mexico high fence hunt. 10 days on horse back and they never saw a fence. I've personally hunted Texas high fence blocks that were 1000 acres of low fence blocked together with 9 other units, all together 10,000 acres. I venture none of you hunt that much ground in Washington on a fair chase hunt. You might be sitting in a million acre forest but that doesn't mean you are hunting it. Good on this gal, nice bull.
Thats a nice bull for sure!!HF elk hunts are a definite turn off, but I support someones right to do it.
Quote from: bullfisher on November 02, 2015, 07:32:38 PMThats a nice bull for sure!!HF elk hunts are a definite turn off, but I support someones right to do it. The real saving grace for real hunters is that they have the memories of what it really takes to harvest an animal one on one in the wild and that is the real trophy. And you can't put a price on it. And you can't buy that experience with money. You buy it by experience and effort.
Quote from: Sitka_Blacktail on November 02, 2015, 11:57:17 PMQuote from: bullfisher on November 02, 2015, 07:32:38 PMThats a nice bull for sure!!HF elk hunts are a definite turn off, but I support someones right to do it. The real saving grace for real hunters is that they have the memories of what it really takes to harvest an animal one on one in the wild and that is the real trophy. And you can't put a price on it. And you can't buy that experience with money. You buy it by experience and effort. Well said!I haven't gone to see if she is claiming she "hunted" this animal or not, but I hope there was a good reason and that her only choice to actually shoot an animal was to go to a high fence ranch. I do agree about fencing in wild animals being illegal- I do believe some states have this rule do they now?
I do agree about fencing in wild animals being illegal- I do believe some states have this rule do they now?
Quote from: bullfisher on November 02, 2015, 07:32:38 PMThats a nice bull for sure!!HF elk hunts are a definite turn off, but I support someones right to do it.If she wants to pay whatever so she can put a bullet in an animal that doesn't have a chance in Hades of getting away, that's her business. But don't call it hunting. It's farming. When you are guaranteed the animal you want by the dollar amount you are willing to pay, you are purchasing an animal, not hunting it. What you do with it after you buy it is your business. But don't call it hunting. The sad thing is, it cheapens real accomplishments of real hunters who work really hard to take a mature animal on it's own terms. Because once you kill them and have them mounted, they all look basically the same. There is no way to tell the difference just by looking at a set of antlers. The real saving grace for real hunters is that they have the memories of what it really takes to harvest an animal one on one in the wild and that is the real trophy. And you can't put a price on it. And you can't buy that experience with money. You buy it by experience and effort. I would take any wild wild fair chase taken animal as a trophy over that bull, even a cow. That bull is like buying a set of replica antlers and thinking you have a trophy.
need a good reason? how about that she's in Wisconsin, no elk hunting there, with all the bashing surprised nobody's yet said " if that was me I'd kick her a$$"
Quote from: Sitka_Blacktail on November 02, 2015, 11:57:17 PMQuote from: bullfisher on November 02, 2015, 07:32:38 PMThats a nice bull for sure!!HF elk hunts are a definite turn off, but I support someones right to do it.If she wants to pay whatever so she can put a bullet in an animal that doesn't have a chance in Hades of getting away, that's her business. But don't call it hunting. It's farming. When you are guaranteed the animal you want by the dollar amount you are willing to pay, you are purchasing an animal, not hunting it. What you do with it after you buy it is your business. But don't call it hunting. The sad thing is, it cheapens real accomplishments of real hunters who work really hard to take a mature animal on it's own terms. Because once you kill them and have them mounted, they all look basically the same. There is no way to tell the difference just by looking at a set of antlers. The real saving grace for real hunters is that they have the memories of what it really takes to harvest an animal one on one in the wild and that is the real trophy. And you can't put a price on it. And you can't buy that experience with money. You buy it by experience and effort. I would take any wild wild fair chase taken animal as a trophy over that bull, even a cow. That bull is like buying a set of replica antlers and thinking you have a trophy.exactly. Its a great looking bull, but its not really something to brag about. The difference between a trophy earned for a great season of your favorite sport vs. A trophy bought at the goodwill.