Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on September 08, 2011, 08:56:12 AMDo we think that taking a stand for higher ethics and skill can shed a more favorable light on bow hunting? Or, in doing so, are we just setting ourselves up for more regulation and less opportunity?Who is the class going to impress? in who's light will bowhunting be more favorable? the majority of the population has no opinion on bowhunting. they never think about it and never pay attention to it. You won't change a single anti-hunters mind.
Do we think that taking a stand for higher ethics and skill can shed a more favorable light on bow hunting? Or, in doing so, are we just setting ourselves up for more regulation and less opportunity?
Just to ask, do you feel the same way about hunter's ed in general?
I'm personally not looking to impress anyone. I'd take the course just to see if it had anything new to offer me. That's why I took the Master Hunter's course, and it offered me new and different perspectives on hunting. Many who've taken the bow hunter's courses in ID and MT relate like experiences and have stated it's a worthwhile course from which they gained benefit.
As far as non-hunters (not anti-hunters), if they see a picture in the local paper of a deer with an arrow sticking out of its jaw, they might become an anti-hunter. If they find out archers are being proactive and taking this course to improve their sport, they may not be swayed so easily. Remember that 93% of the population doesn't hunt here in WA. Good or bad press can influence their votes regarding our favorite pastime, as it did with hound and bait hunting in 1996 when that 93% voted against us and made it illegal. My own opinion is that anything we can do to improve our image in the eyes of this 93% should be at the very least examined, as we're doing in discussing this thread. My own
...not to mention a guy who has his compound at full draw, pointing it into a clump of trees as he walks up to it because he hears what turns out to be another hunter with an elk call inside the clump of trees.
I then asked him which way he was headed, and took off in the opposite direction.
The bottom line is this course would weed out the riff raff amongst our ranks. We would police our own. The woods would be less crowded. Thus creating more opportunity. I don't see how having to take a course would reduce our opportunities. I am not about reducing opportunity but I am for making our comunity better. A class would do this.I agree with AKBOWMAN at the very least there should be incentives for taking the course.
Quote from: Snapshot on September 08, 2011, 01:10:06 PM...not to mention a guy who has his compound at full draw, pointing it into a clump of trees as he walks up to it because he hears what turns out to be another hunter with an elk call inside the clump of trees.Funny you mention that (not really funny, but I have a story...), I ran across a guy hunting in 560 last year and asked him how he was doing. He excitedly told me about getting into elk earlier that morning and being at full draw twice because he "heard something coming towards him" If my jaw hadn't dropped by then, it hit the ground when he told me he blew it on one of those elk because he bumped his release accidentally and shot an arrow into the dirt. I then asked him which way he was headed, and took off in the opposite direction.By the way, he also mentioned that it was his first year bowhunting.
Quote from: colockumelk on September 08, 2011, 09:11:37 PMThe bottom line is this course would weed out the riff raff amongst our ranks. We would police our own. The woods would be less crowded. Thus creating more opportunity. I don't see how having to take a course would reduce our opportunities. I am not about reducing opportunity but I am for making our comunity better. A class would do this.I agree with AKBOWMAN at the very least there should be incentives for taking the course. One of the rare times I disagree with you. The course would not, in my opinion, change a thing out in the woods.
It's like a giant pinata with deer and elk as the candy, and lots of armed people wanting that candy.
I think for the most part the class itself wouldn't change too many things in the woods. I think that a large number of the people that are doing unethical things in the woods now do so because they feel pressured to because of the way the hunting is set up. You cram lots of people into a small area with a small time window and a limited resource, and for many it becomes competition against other hunters and no longer competing with oneself or the animal. It's like a giant pinata with deer and elk as the candy, and lots of armed people wanting that candy.