The following blog post is from the Friends of Edie Road (a group of bird watchers and wildlife watchers who are proposing repurposing the Edie Road area to non-hunting for three primary reasons:
1. Having hunters and other visitors present in quantity at the same time, in the same area, is an accident waiting to happen.
2. The growing base of non-hunting visitors is seriously under-represented in the WDFW land use decision making process. There are many more birders and photographers visiting the site than hunters.
3. This site is unique for birding because it is flat, easily accessible, and most important: a large variety of bird species love it.
http://friendsofeideroad.org/blog/blog_index.php?pid=10&p=&search=#blt
August 21st, 2013
Conservation, according to my dictionary, is the act of conserving; prevention of injury, decay, waste, or loss; preservation, as conservation of wildlife.
The pheasant season is once again upon us. The state sponsored killing of tame, farm-raised pheasant will frighten most of the shorebirds away from Eide Road until the end of November. This is not the way to demonstrate conservation.But if you hunters look out along the paved road and parking area, you will see that there is an new and growing group of real conservationists emerging. They have invaded your hunt club by posting their yellow Discover Pass inside their windshield. They don’t carry guns but field guides, spotting scopes, and cameras. They exhibit a combination of awe and respect for the wild creatures they encounter, and shock and dismay at seeing them needlessly killed.
Some hunter apparently couldn’t wait for a pheasant so he unloaded his 12 gauge on the Discover Pass sign at Eide Road – mid-August 2013.
If hunters are looking for something to shoot, why don’t they set their sites on the Kardashians?
Sorry. I couldn’t help myself.
I’m watching this video right now while at work (it’s quiet today) and it is brilliant! The only part that made me sad is the initial animals who are trapped inside houses/buildings after man has gone. However, when you reach 38:34, you will learn that wolves will proliferate once man is gone (yay!). http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/life-after-people/
🙂
Life After People — oh how I wish. 🙂
What the fuck do they mean “ghoulish?” I think it sounds wonderful.
I agree — this planet and all it’s non-human inhabitants would be better off. I loved the bit about wolves thriving/reproducing and getting on just fine without any human hatred around.
Everything will fall back into place–that’s the one thing that gives me hope.
The domestic animals trapped in houses made me sad too. I thought of my ten cats not being able to get out of the house.
The show wasted a lot of time making people feel bad about domestic animals who depend on us going hungry if humans all suddenly disappeared (as if). The viewer is supposed to feel sad about humans disappearing, as if humans serve a purpose. There are books (such as, the World Without Us) that cover the subject without dwelling so much on that.
I thought the same thing too. 😦
I have watched Life After People and was amazed how quickly nature can take back the land we humans have appropriated. It doesn’t take thousands of years either. It is a wonderful hope that things can heal in favor of the wild. Example is the Chernobyl section of Russia which was vacated by people because of contamination-animals are moving back into the area and living in the buildings once inhabited by people.
The forest has taken over the village of Pripyat near the Chernobyl disaster. A stunning example of how nature returns…when we are no more.
When we are no more…the planet will finally be sustainable again.
Management rationale: We, Maine hunters, need to use radio collared dogs to chase and tree bears, leg snares to catch and hold them until we can get there and shoot them. We have to do this to manage bears so that the population will not get out of control. In how many instances do we hear this rationale for “sports” killing, especially against predators? How often has non-man-management been tried, let the animal ecology manage itself? Yellowstone wolves and bears manage themselves. Might this be true if tried outside the parks? This is the basis of hunters’ argument that they are true environmentalists because they manage animal populations. This central idea of wildlife agency and hunters’ argument needs challenging. Is it true that bears and lions and wolves and other critters will over-populate and get out of control? Should we be thanking hunters for their sportsmen ethic of any chase is fair chase and necessary killing?
How about this idea? Abolish hunting of predators and maybe all animals and see what happens. Then, if problems arise, come up with protocols for dealing with the issues with preferences for nonlethal control or management, lethal only if necessary mainly for chronic offenders for which there seems to be no other option. Nature had millennium to work out wildlife ecology, predator prey balance and the give and take and waxing and waning of populations. Then came man-management, the wildlife agencies and their management by hunting with little question as to the necessity.
Roger Hewitt
Great Falls MT