Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Chase 1 on April 27, 2012, 04:15:23 PMQuote from: pianoman9701 on April 27, 2012, 10:25:41 AMAnyone hear about the proposal to outlaw string silencers? Yeah... but after archers polled 85% in favor, and the GMAC, WSB, and WDFW approved the change... the commissioners rejected it. Wrong again... you would think you would know your own organizations stand... WSB did not approve.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on April 27, 2012, 10:25:41 AMAnyone hear about the proposal to outlaw string silencers? Yeah... but after archers polled 85% in favor, and the GMAC, WSB, and WDFW approved the change... the commissioners rejected it.
Anyone hear about the proposal to outlaw string silencers?
As for the status quo... if that held water there would be no archery seasons.
Quote from: Snapshot on April 27, 2012, 02:05:32 PMQuote from: link=topic=96267.msg1252398#msg1252398 date=1335547267I am not trying to change the status quo. If unity was really so important the status quo would not be challenged because it isn't broke. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Another poorly thought out comment Snapshot, even our founding fathers knew that times change and with it so must we, that is why we have amendments to our constitution. Are you suggesting that our dept. believes they got everything perfect when the original set of rules were adopted and they would never require amending? Come on, even they understood it would evolve over time.
Quote from: link=topic=96267.msg1252398#msg1252398 date=1335547267I am not trying to change the status quo. If unity was really so important the status quo would not be challenged because it isn't broke. If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
Quote from: Chase 1 on April 27, 2012, 04:06:48 PMAs for the status quo... if that held water there would be no archery seasons. Kin you s'plain that fer me real slow? Cuz I don't git that a'tall...
Your position is crystal clear, you don't want electronics of any kind in archery. You want traditional equipment only and you are oppose to change of any kind. Bout sum it up?
Quote from: Chase 1 on April 29, 2012, 10:47:00 AMYour position is crystal clear, you don't want electronics of any kind in archery. You want traditional equipment only and you are oppose to change of any kind. Bout sum it up?Correct on the first charge; yes it is that simple. With all due respect, on the second. As to the third I will only suggest (and I'm stealing this from a friend because I think it fits) a frog doesn't jump out of a pan of water that is slowly heating because any change he might sense isn't perceived as a threat; but once the point of no return is reached, he can't get out. I think bowhunting is already the cooked frog in places that have an "anything goes" attitude about what can be used in general bowhunting seasons. And I don't think everyplace else has to follow that path.
Great reply.Some of the newer archery hunters are so attracted to new pretty shiny things they do not understand (or do not care) by allowing more technology into primitive seasons that our season will be shortened or cancelled.Quote from: Snapshot on April 29, 2012, 03:21:39 PMQuote from: link=topic=96267.msg1254008#msg1254008 date=1335721620
Quote from: link=topic=96267.msg1254008#msg1254008 date=1335721620
Great reply.Some of the newer archery hunters are so attracted to new pretty shiny things they do not understand (or do not care) by allowing more technology into primitive seasons that our season will be shortened or cancelled.
Quote from: Snapshot on April 29, 2012, 03:21:39 PMQuote from: Chase 1 on April 29, 2012, 10:47:00 AMYour position is crystal clear, you don't want electronics of any kind in archery. You want traditional equipment only and you are oppose to change of any kind. Bout sum it up?Correct on the first charge; yes it is that simple. With all due respect, on the second. As to the third I will only suggest (and I'm stealing this from a friend because I think it fits) a frog doesn't jump out of a pan of water that is slowly heating because any change he might sense isn't perceived as a threat; but once the point of no return is reached, he can't get out. I think bowhunting is already the cooked frog in places that have an "anything goes" attitude about what can be used in general bowhunting seasons. And I don't think everyplace else has to follow that path.Your cute little fos emo says liar and I can't figure where that is?
Quote from: ribka on April 29, 2012, 08:22:23 PMGreat reply.Some of the newer archery hunters are so attracted to new pretty shiny things they do not understand (or do not care) by allowing more technology into primitive seasons that our season will be shortened or cancelled.You could be right. If my 26 years of flingin arrows isn't enough to give me an opinion than let me know how many more I need before I get one. Can you please let everyone know, especially archers, what it is that archers will be losing for time in the field, opportunity, or canceled seasons when this is approved? Don't you see by now that it's not enough to just say something to make it true?
Fifty years ago bowhunting was the true test of a woodsman/hunter; it was damned difficult. Seasons were carved out that provided lots of time in the field because of how difficult bowhunting was. These days there are people getting into bowhunting because they like the seasons but they do not really like everything that bowhunting involves; they want to change the rules.Did you know that it was bowhunters who wrote, proposed and saw passed the current archery rule that keeps electronics out of Washington’s bowhunting season? They were forward thinking men who saw where commerce was leading bowhunting, and recognized that manufacturers didn’t have bowhunting’s long-term interests at heart. Twenty-five years have passed since then and now in many places across North America there isn’t much if any regulation on what electronics can or can’t be used in bowhunting seasons. There are nineteen states and provinces that have allowed the crossbow full inclusion during general archery seasons. Washington is one of the few places the founding fathers of bowhunting could come back to and recognize what it is they started.