A diffrent kind of hunting.
Forum rules
Please keep hunting posts to Traditional Bow Hunting. No canned or high fence hunts or stories allowed. Please be respectful of fellow members and helpful to those with questions. Treat others like you like to be treated. There is a Japanese word that I try and model my life after.
GAMAN: patience..dignity..restraint.
Please keep hunting posts to Traditional Bow Hunting. No canned or high fence hunts or stories allowed. Please be respectful of fellow members and helpful to those with questions. Treat others like you like to be treated. There is a Japanese word that I try and model my life after.
GAMAN: patience..dignity..restraint.
A diffrent kind of hunting.
"Maybe the truly handicapped people are the ones that don't need God as much." ~ Joni Eareckson Tada
Re: A diffrent kind of hunting.
"Maybe the truly handicapped people are the ones that don't need God as much." ~ Joni Eareckson Tada
Re: A diffrent kind of hunting.
At some point hunters have to accept the fact that they "must" obey "all" the hunting regulations. If not, they run the risk of eventually loosing their hunting privileges.
Sometimes it's hard enough to do everything right and not overlook some change or regulation. The toughest place to hunt is on state land or a state park that allows hunting.
There you are right in the middle of conservation officers and you can just about bank on the fact that they will be monitoring you much closer than other hunters on private land.
Poaching or shooting out the window is pretty flagrant in many parts of the country. I know in Pike County Illinois, one of the hotspots in the state, it is pretty much common knowledge that when a really big buck is spotted, he will probably be poached by illegal means. My wife and I have to be careful, because we enjoy watching the deer as we drive around. The temptation to stop and turn your headlights into a field full of deer can get you a ticket just for disturbing the deer even when there are no firearms in the vehicle and you are only looking.
I'd bet the Conservation Officers consider what they are doing as hunting and get just as much enjoyment out of it as we hunters do.
Sometimes it's hard enough to do everything right and not overlook some change or regulation. The toughest place to hunt is on state land or a state park that allows hunting.
There you are right in the middle of conservation officers and you can just about bank on the fact that they will be monitoring you much closer than other hunters on private land.
Poaching or shooting out the window is pretty flagrant in many parts of the country. I know in Pike County Illinois, one of the hotspots in the state, it is pretty much common knowledge that when a really big buck is spotted, he will probably be poached by illegal means. My wife and I have to be careful, because we enjoy watching the deer as we drive around. The temptation to stop and turn your headlights into a field full of deer can get you a ticket just for disturbing the deer even when there are no firearms in the vehicle and you are only looking.
I'd bet the Conservation Officers consider what they are doing as hunting and get just as much enjoyment out of it as we hunters do.
Jesus replaces the old covenant and speaks to the believer the moral code of God by His Spirit directly to the heart. He is the eternal, everlasting revelation of God to mankind. In Him is both the knowledge of righteousness and the power to live right.
Re: A diffrent kind of hunting.
I know several wildlife and fishery officers. I can confirm that they love the thrill of the hunt.
Nothing clears a troubled mind like shooting a bow.