Page 4 of 6 FirstFirst 123456 LastLast
Results 31 to 40 of 60

Thread: Another Ethical Question

  1. #31
    Apprentice

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by trimmer21 View Post
    You didn't proof read THAT before you hit "post" did you? ROFLMAO!!
    Omg I just spit my tea out again!!!! Tooooo funny.
    Poor sawbill. Omg. DYING lol
    His post is soooo funny.
    Kinda thought you would have been the first to jump on that Trimmer....being a man cougars corner and all
    Last edited by Noseyarentcha; December 3rd, 2016 at 10:09 PM.
    My attitude towards you depends upon how you have treated me.

  2. # ADS
    Advertisement
    ADVERTISEMENT
     

  3. #32
    Member for Life

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Noseyarentcha View Post
    Omg I just spit my tea out again!!!! Tooooo funny.
    Poor sawbill. Omg. DYING lol
    His post is soooo funny.
    Kinda thought you would have been the first to jump on that Trimmer....being a man cougars corner and all
    The only "cougars" that ever tried to corner me was when I had my pay cheque in my shirt pocket with the corporate logo facing OUT. It worked,too.
    That reminds me of Johnny Carson asking George Burns why he didn't hang around with women his own age and he said "Because there aren't any."
    If a tree falls on your ex in the woods and nobody hears it,you should probably still get rid of your chainsaw. Just sayin'....

  4. #33
    Apprentice

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by trimmer21 View Post
    The only "cougars" that ever tried to corner me was when I had my pay cheque in my shirt pocket with the corporate logo facing OUT. It worked,too.
    That reminds me of Johnny Carson asking George Burns why he didn't hang around with women his own age and he said "Because there aren't any."
    You were baiting those cougars!
    My attitude towards you depends upon how you have treated me.

  5. #34
    Member for Life

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Noseyarentcha View Post
    You were baiting those cougars!
    Always use bait. Hey,I was single and time was wasting back in the day.LOL
    Last edited by trimmer21; December 4th, 2016 at 01:06 AM.
    If a tree falls on your ex in the woods and nobody hears it,you should probably still get rid of your chainsaw. Just sayin'....

  6. #35
    Post-a-holic

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by GuyJR View Post
    But I might add, it if comes to you with a definite kill wound and you just finish it off I would say it's not your deer. Just my 2c.

    I had a buddy, who's view of hunting ethics was that if you can't take the perfect shot, you are better not to shoot at all. A wound animal is just as likely to end up as coyote food as it is to be tracked down and found. Should another hunter have the opportunity and the good fortune to put such an animal out of it's misery, and prevent the above mention possibilities. I would suggest that the kill is his. A lesson to the first hunter who should have taken more care in making his shot placement, or should not have taken a shot at all. It's been my experienced that a well place kill shot, tends to down the animal within the first 100 yards.

    You don't stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
    - Gun Nut
    Last edited by Gun Nut; December 7th, 2016 at 06:32 AM.

  7. #36
    Loyal Member

    User Info Menu

    Default

    I would absolutely agree that you should take the best shot you can but that is not always practical. If you have ever been part of a southern Ontario deer hunt pushing blocks you know that shooting running deer is the name of the game. Even solidly hit deer can go quite the distance. I also would not consider it good fortune to shoot someones wounded deer. Nor would I want to keep it.

  8. #37
    Apprentice

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gun Nut View Post
    I had a buddy, who's view of hunting ethics was that if you can't take the perfect shot, you are better not to shoot at all. A wound animal is just as likely to end up as coyote food as it is to be tracked down and found. Should another hunter have the opportunity and the good fortune to put such an animal out of it's misery, and prevent the above mention possibilities. I would suggest that the kill is his. A lesson to the first hunter who should have taken more care in making his shot placement, or should not have taken a shot at all. It's been my experienced that a well place kill shot, tends to down the animal within the first 100 yards.

    You don't stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
    - Gun Nut
    So your buddy has never lost a deer? If so he is lucky. Sometimes stuff happens. For example this fall my son had a very nice deer walk out at 25yds while bowhunting (crossbow). When it was broadside he aimed behind the front leg and shot. Just at that instant the deer must have caught some movement and looked up at my son, turning slightly. The shot ended up entering the neck and poked out just behind the front leg. We tracked that deer over 500yds down a ravine and up on top the other side and when we found him he was laying down but still breathing. I put another bolt in him and finished him off. So what started off as an ethical broadside shot turned into something else. BY the way the deer had 13pts and dressed at 227lbs (which we were made painfully aware of dragging it back down and up that ravine. TC

  9. #38
    Has too much time on their hands

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Anyone who assumes that waiting for a perfect shot will guarantee perfect results has not taken too many shots at live animals. It will undoubtedly reduce the chances of things going wrong but as said above, sometimes stuff happens. You can never account for every variable.
    "where a man feels at home, outside of where he's born, is where he's meant to go"
    ​- Ernest Hemingway

  10. #39
    Post-a-holic

    User Info Menu

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by GuyJR View Post
    I would absolutely agree that you should take the best shot you can but that is not always practical. If you have ever been part of a southern Ontario deer hunt pushing blocks you know that shooting running deer is the name of the game. Even solidly hit deer can go quite the distance. I also would not consider it good fortune to shoot someones wounded deer. Nor would I want to keep it.

    Shooting a running deer, that translates into spray and pray. And when you are shooting at a running deer are you constantly checking the background with each shot you make? This goes beyond making an ethical kill shot, this takes you into hunter safety concerns, and on public land where you have no ideas of where other hunters are it can be extremely dangerous and could prove to be down right fatal, and I don't mean to the deer. Just for the record gut shots are not solid hits, lung and heart are, neck and brain shot can be, but are not recommended. Even shooting at the heart and lungs might not produce a solid hit if the bullet is too light and breaks up before actually penetrating the chest cavity. This can also happen to a bigger bullet that pass through branches before they hits. Again, I'm not likely to change your mind as to how you hunt, you may be very good at hitting deer on the run. In my youth I use to take cottontails on the dead run with my old bolt action .22, but I always knew there was some solid ground behind the rabbit to receive the bullet.

    You don't stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
    - Gun Nut
    Last edited by Gun Nut; December 7th, 2016 at 12:05 PM.

  11. #40
    Loyal Member

    User Info Menu

    Default

    We must live in much different worlds Gun Nut. I would bet that 70%+ of the deer shot in in the southern Ontario controlled hunt are shot during drives or pushes and more are running than not. Just the reality I see.
    Quote Originally Posted by Gun Nut View Post
    Shooting a running deer, that translates into spray and pray. And when you are shooting at a running deer are you constantly checking the background with each shot you make? This goes beyond making an ethical kill shot, this takes you into hunter safety concerns, and on public land where you have no ideas of where other hunters are it can be extremely dangerous and could prove to be down right fatal, and I don't mean to the deer. Just for the record gut shots are not solid hits, lung and heart are, neck and brain shot can be, but are not recommended. Even shooting at the heart and lungs might not produce a solid hit if the bullet is too light and breaks up before actually penetrating the chest cavity. This can also happen to a bigger bullet that pass through branches before they hits. Again, I'm not likely to change your mind as to how you hunt, you may be very good at hitting deer on the run. In my youth I use to take cottontails on the dead run with my old bolt action .22, but I always knew there was some solid ground behind the rabbit to receive the bullet.

    You don't stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
    - Gun Nut

Page 4 of 6 FirstFirst 123456 LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •