Good solid answer
@Ackers-303. Sets the matter straight, though you really shouldn’t need to explain yourself like that. I’ve been impressed with your approach and I’m sorry you’ve inadvertently attracted the wrong kind of attention. But it’s like that around here.
When I joined this forum, I was advised by a well known and respected member that I should keep my mouth shut about long range hunting, “because they don’t like it on here”, or words to that effect. We had a long conversation about the hunting related activities that cause a certain type of member a certain kind of offence.
The kind of offence that results in comments like “At least I’m not a Chris Kyle wannabe”, “but only if necessary not as some macho bravado B.S” or “It brings the whole sport into disrepute” and “the risk increases exponentially at long range” etc etc.
The member that advised me no longer participates here, as he got tired with the culture of glass-half-empty naysayers. We’d met up in NZ and stayed in touch, but he’s moved on other things. Can’t really say I blame him.
There’s a whole host of hunting activities that attract unfiltered opprobrium on this forum, mostly, it seems to me, from guys that have never actually participated in these activites. “Long range” is one, though of course very few people have an understanding of what proper long range even is, let alone the detailed preparation, knowledge, equipment, skill and patience involved. To them, it is a notion outside their frame of reference that possibly challenges their own self esteem and competence, so must therefore by default be wrong, so onto the bandwagon they climb and we’re off with another fight about ethics and wind and injured deer and so on.
We have the same issues with head shooting, neck shooting, calibres and cartridges, bow hunting, crossbows, shot placement... you name it. I’ve left our NZ pig hunting off the list because I’ve deliberately avoided bringing that to this particular table, because I know that many members simply won’t be able to handle it.
Those that practice these disciplines or make these choices are basically reviled as unethical scumbags in as many words! Yet I sit here as a 40yr+ veteran of all sorts of rifle hunting, bow hunting (though not for a long time now), hunting with dogs, trapping, netting, fishing and of course farming livestock, and I wonder, am I really an unethical scumbag? What is it these stuffy, one eyed Britishers don’t see about what we do? And why we do it? Is it tradition? Culture? The personality? Bit of everything really I suspect. I do certainly see a geographical pattern to it, for sure.
It’s definitely got a lot to do with tradition, tradition that comes from a time well before modern weaponry, optics, rangefinders, etc etc. I’ve experienced the auto-naysaying almost exclusively in Europe, whereas in the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand its been a far more open minded culture of individual preferences and respect for skills, experience and success. A totally different culture altogether. That’s not to say that you don’t run into naysayers from time-to-time - certainly in the US there were some very parochial attitudes towards different types of hunting, mostly from guys who never travelled much outside their own county boundary, let alone across the state line.
But here’s the thing. The bit that really intrigues me about this constant stream of Stalking Directory disapproval about the ways of others...
They like driven shooting.
I get lambasted for choosing to shoot a stationery deer or a goat at 500m and posting a video.
Oh you never post videos of all your fails. Oh you are a lazy, sniper wannabe loser so and so for not stalking in closer. Oh you’re using way too little gun. Oh you’re a Creedmoor fan boy, its a fad and you know nothing. Oh you must lose dozens of deer and just don’t own up to it. Sound familiar?
But next weekend, the very same naysayers are off to Germany to shoot running pigs. Or, if they can’t afford it (and in fact don’t really do much stalking at all anyway), they’ll happily engage in the threads of those that do. Bravo! Great effort! Lots of discussion of Blasers and Count Franz and all manner of grunty cartridges and the like.
Running pigs. And they run fast!
It’s really no different to the gamebirds. They’re flying, fast, and great kudos goes to those with the skill and panache (and deep pockets it seems) that sees them make spectacular kills with posh 12ga shotguns. But we all know that lots of birds get hit aft, with stray pellets...
Just like we all know that countless numbers of boar are hit and wounded and never recovered. It’s just a fact of life. What goes on behind the scenes on driven boar hunts is kept behind the scenes. It’s nowhere near as in your face blatant and grotesque as the helicopter hog hunters in Texas, but it happens nonetheless.
So I look at this glaring contradiction and say to myself this: I shoot deer with everything from a .308 open sights lever gun at 20 yards, to a custom 28 Nosler at 700m or more, and I make a massive effort to ensure that each and every animal gets sacked on the spot. DRT. Bang flopped. Smoked. Flattened. Sometimes they run on a bit, mortally wounded, but not often. Very rarely - once in the last five or so years - I lose a deer that I can’t find at the time. (Though the last one was found, two days later, which I wrote up on here.) And as such, I’m going to continue advocating for what we do and if that means having regular scraps with the ignorant, then so be it!
I’ve developed a dozen or more really solid acquaintances through this forum, helping guys get ahead in different aspects of hunting, and I’ve really, really enjoyed it, and its immensely satisfying to see their successes on the email. Bugger the naysayers.
It’s not always been plain sailing in the field though. As our personal business interests and relationships have expanded, inevitably requests to go hunting are made, and usually with me, reluctantly agreed to. Several times in the past few years I’ve had the misfortune to guide people that don’t know their arse from their elbow. I’ve lain in the thistles and sheep shite and watched a guy shoot two red deer at 150yd with a .300 Win Mag and completely screw it up, causing the wounded deer to bolt and be lost forever in the chasms of scrub and native bush on our block. That incident resulted in the mandatory 400yd dinner plate test. In 2011, I spent 3 hours reluctantly stalking in on a pair of good 12-14 point red stags with a client of my business partner, only for him to
clean miss the best animal at no more than 50yds with his grotesque “classic” double rifle, and then go and shoot the fleeing second stag up the arse with the second barrel. I actually threatened that man with a hiding and he damn near got it.
Now I won’t take anyone I don’t know and trust. I hunt today only with a small cadre of blokes dedicated to doing the best job we can in the circumstances we have in front of us. Long range, close range, different species, dogs or no dogs, different rifles, different types of bullet, dawn, daylight, dusk and night vision, together or alone... with my wife, sons, mates and my fantastic cousins from England and the US.
But on this forum, a lot of what we do gets lambasted and castigated by small minded men with no experience outside a narrow frame of reference. Incendiary words maybe, but, largely, sadly, true.
But you like shooting at running or flying animals.
Go figure.