Elkbow,
You and I have shared the same thoughts. In this age of chasing the biggest, and the best, have we watered down the pursuit totally? I mean shooting a 150 inch deer, twenty years ago was a greater feat than doing it on a property managed to grow those deer.
I happend to believe that most hunters are enviormentalist. I happen to believe that many so called enviormentalist are off base, not because they are enviormentalist, but because they have a political agenda.
Just because a person blocks a chain saw to stop the cutting of trees, does not an enviormentalist make. The desire to protect and preserve must be balanced with science, not emotion, fact not supposition.
I may have gotten off the point, but bare with me, I will attempt to bring it all together shortly.
The supplemental feeding of game, to provide more protein for anlter and body growth is not endangering the future genetics of deer. It is providing for greater numbers of deerin some places, as the carrying capacity of the land is no longer in the equation. Some view this as bad. This will only be a problem if, there are not sufficient numbers harvested off that piece of land, or if the landonwer, for whatever reason, stops the supplemental feeding. I have seen the die-offs, not a pretty sight at all.
I happend to believe that man's place in the grand scheem of things in nature, was detailed in the Bible. Nature is loaned to us, to take care of, we will be judged on how well we take care of it. Judgement can be swift, if we abuse that right. Dust Bowl, Flooding, etc...the lists goes on and on.
Let's face it, we all love big deer, and most of us would not walk away from a chance to place our tag on one. I think we are reaching a point where it will all come back and bite us in the you know what.
Follow the money, if there is big money in killing big deer, somebody will grow big deer. If there is big money in selling "space bows" with wheels, and release adds, then somebody will sell them. We are a fast food society, we want it now, and we don't want to have to work at very hard to get it. Many want praise for what they do, while I like bowhunting DVDs and shows, bowhunting is not now, nor was it intended to be a spectator sport.
There are ethics, and there is conviction. The two can be part of the same, but very different. I may be within the law to hunt a certain way, therefore legal and ethical. Yet, I may have personal convictions that would not allow me to hunt that way.
Part of that can be, or is at least with me, deals with the challenge. I practice a lot, I practice hard, I hone my tracking skills, I sharpen my woodsmanship skills, I learn as much about the prey as I can. I work to get really close, I spend time in the woods year around.
Here is where I attempt to bring it all back into persective. We as traditional hunters, have choosen the path less traveled, and the hard way of doing it. Just because others choose a different, sometimes easier way in no way requires we do the same, nor will our goal be the same. That will be true, even when we are all looked upon as being bowhunters.
In point of fact, we will continue to hold the line, remain that link to the past, not for selfish reasons, not to show off, and not because we are better than anyone else. We will do it because, many of those wrapped up in the modern way, will grow tired of "business as usual". It is human nature to seek a challenge to grow, especially when things are "too easy".
We will be there to welcome them with open arms, to guide them, to show them another way, of true enlightenment of full enjoyment of being a part of nature, no just a participant in it.
Yes, we have made mistakes. Gotten focused on the wrong things. Praise God we still have places to hunt where the deer are deer, just the way they have been for thousands of years. No high fences, no "Record Rack" feed. We can chase them the way we want, making it as easy, within reason, or as hard as we wish. I don't kill nearly as many deer a year as I did when I shot a compound. I killed fewer with the compound bow than I did with my rifle, but the deer I take with my stick and string are treasured far more, and rightfully hold a more special place in my heart, even if they are not worthy of most peoples walls. I guess that is why I can go home after a hard week of hunting, with an empty game pole, and have a smile on my face.
I have arrived at this place in my life that an empty game pole, or a heavy one bring the same amount of joy to me. The thrill of the chase, the chess game. Give me land with a few deer, a real bow in my hand, a quiver full of arrows, the time to hunt, a blue sky, cool temps, and the wind in my face. Ghee! I think I have found the treasure in the pleasure!