More Women Give Hunting a Shot

[Says Tiffany Lakosky, co-host of the Outdoor Channel hunting show Crush with Lee and Tiffany and a bowhunter: “We are all part of the food chain.” Oh really? How come human remains rarely make it back into the food chain? If any a human is ever preyed upon by a non-human animal, said animal is hunted down and killed, while the human remains are embalmed and buried 6 feet under.]

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2013/11/131103-sarah-palin-lope-navo1women-hunters-local-meat-food-outdoor-sports/

For truly free-range meat, some say they prefer the woods to the grocery store.
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Kristen A. Schmitt

for National Geographic

Published November 3, 2013

In recent years, American women are spending more time in tree stands and deer blinds—and putting fresh meat on the table. Although men still account for the majority of the 13.7 million U.S. hunters, the number of women actively hunting is on the rise.

The total number of women hunters surged by 25 percent between 2006 and 2011, after holding steady for a decade, according to Census Bureau statistics. At last count, 11 percent of all U.S. hunters were women, compared to 9 percent in 2006.

Many state departments of natural resources have begun hosting Becoming an Outdoors-Woman (BOW) workshops that offer instruction in skills such as archery, shotgun, and rifle shooting.

“There is definitely a high demand. We have over 3,000 women on our mailing list, and workshops fill up quickly,” says Patricia Handy, Information & Education Program Manager at the Department of Natural Resources in Maryland.

Retailers have taken notice, too. Companies like SHE Outdoor Apparel, Cabela’s, and Próis are outfitting women hunters with clothing and accessories created for the female body, and archery manufacturers like Mathews Inc. are designing lighter bows scaled for shorter arm spans.

“Across the board, women are more independent than they’ve ever been, and they realize they are capable of hunting,” says Brenda Valentine, national spokesperson for the National Wild Turkey Federation and the self-proclaimed “First Lady of Hunting.”

The Next Food Frontier?

Gender roles in America have changed in many ways through time, but women still dominate household food and nutrition decisions. The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ 2012 American Time Use survey found that nearly two-thirds of women are involved in daily household food preparation and cleanup, compared to 39 percent of men—and women spend triple the amount of time on such tasks in an average day.

Women are also leading a surge of support for sustainable food and agriculture initiatives like CSAs and farmers markets. One of the main ideas of such initiatives is eating locally, generally meaning foods produced within your state or about 100 miles of your home. This not only supports the local economy and environment, it also means the food often tastes better because it can be harvested and sold at its peak rather than spending days in transport.

But in many parts of the country, local meat can be difficult to find. Most of the available meat at U.S. grocery stores comes from one of the large-scale commercial farms, often called factory farms, concentrated in a few regions.

Hunting offers an alternative to the grocery store that lets women provide truly free-range and organic meat for their families while also helping create a more sustainable food system, says Lily Raff McCaulou, author of Call of the Mild: Learning to Hunt My Own Dinner.

“Hunting may be the next frontier for local food,” says McCaulou, who lives in Oregon. She regularly hunts deer and elk, and recently added grouse and duck to her repertoire.

“I was pretty detached from what I ate before I started hunting. Since I’ve started hunting, I’ve changed my relationship with the meat that I eat, and I eat a lot less meat than I did before. Hunting’s a way to reclaim some closeness to the food chain.”

It can make chefs more thoughtful, too, says Georgia Pellegrini, author of the book Girl Hunter.

“Hunting made me realize that there’s a lot that has to happen before that piece of meat gets to your plate,” says Pellegrini. “As a chef, I wanted to participate in that process because it makes the experience more meaningful. You think about the ingredients differently, you think about the experience of eating it differently, and you have more control over how the animal was treated.”

Making Connections

Many hunters—both men and women—say their hobby is not just about food. It also creates a sense of intimacy and respect for both the animals and their habitats.

Writer Tovar Cerulli was a longtime vegetarian when he took up hunting, deciding that eating “the ultimate free-range meat” was an ethical and sustainable choice.

“Hunting also allowed me to gain a deeper understanding of the place I lived,” says Cerulli, author of the book A Mindful Carnivore. He argues that in a regulated, well-managed system, “there is nothing inherently ecologically damaging about hunting.” It can actually benefit the animals by preventing overpopulation, which can lead to starvation during winter months.

Hunters are also quick to note that funds from purchases of licenses, equipment, and ammunition go to support conservation efforts for a variety of species. According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, every year nearly $200 million is distributed from the federal taxes associated with hunting to support wildlife management programs, the purchase of lands for habitat conservation, and hunter education and safety classes.

There’s another factor, too: fun. Hunting is a way for women to be outdoors and enjoy nature while spending time with husbands and children who hunt.

“Women are realizing how much fun hunting is and how close it can actually bring them in their relationships with their families,” says Tiffany Lakosky, co-host of the Outdoor Channel hunting show Crush with Lee and Tiffany and a top bowhunter. “The whole concept is that I am shooting my family’s dinner tonight and we’re eating something I shot. I would say probably 90 percent of the meat we eat, we hunted.”

While shooting the family dinner isn’t a realistic option for everyone, especially in urban areas, Lakosky says she hopes even non-hunters will start giving more thought to where their food comes from.

“We are all part of the food chain. There is a balance in nature,” she says. “People go to the supermarket and they think that somebody’s growing a TV dinner somewhere to feed them. They are just not connected to it like people were 100 years ago.”

Follow Kristen Schmitt on Twitter.

17 thoughts on “More Women Give Hunting a Shot

  1. more from the top fables and lies
    hunting is helping conservation
    hunting brings the hunter closer to the animals it kills
    hunting helps populations by keeping their populations down
    I remember a show Twilight by Rod Sterling and in one episode other beings visited earth and invited humans onto their ship for dinner, by the end of the show one realized that being invited for dinner meant the humans were the dinner. I remember the moment of horror, when as a child, I realized the people were being hunted and eaten by the other beings. I can’t imagine the fear and stress of being hunted by humans with all their sophisticated weaponry, traps, snares and inhumane cruelty. We really have made living on earth hell for most species. To think of these glib women spewing BS about how hunting brings their families together as they go out, young and old, to take the life of a beautiful wild being.

    • Louise, thanks for this comment. I will have to re-watch that Twilight Zone episode, I’d forgotten about it. (My husband, on the other hand, knows every episode and can probably recite it, beat for beat.)

      I have said this before, but I often think that most animals must see us, rightly, as two-legged monsters. And those who don’t, trust us at their own peril. I struggle emotionally when I experience the genuine beauty of wildlife. I’m in awe, honored, moved and respectful when they let me into their world as a photographer. But, the experience is almost always bittersweet because I understand too well the counterpoint. Sometimes I wish I could just be present without the knowledge of our human truths.

  2. Isn’t it tiresome how often this meme gets pushed in media outlets nowadays?

    It’s so sad how the locavore movement helped deify the likes of Michael Pollan who, through The Ominvore’s Dilemma, convinced so many people to be “connected” — not by making choices that reduce suffering to individual animals but rather, by inflicting that suffering personally, (rather than through a “middleman,” you know). Nearly every hunter I’ve met who started later in life, women especially, cite The Ominvore’s Dilemma as an influential tome. Sadly, they don’t realize that there’s plenty of misinformation in that book, as pointed out by the blog ‘Say What Michael Pollan.” And Pollan’s solipsistic take on his first hog hunt helped a lot of foodies rationalize their own killings. They’re also sadly mistaken to think hunting on a large scale is anything close to “sustainable.” Just look at Malta and what’s happening to migratory birds there.

    I found this sentence in the piece particularly ironic: “Retailers have taken notice, too.” Right. The end-of-the-line retailers, maybe. But Rolling Stone ran a piece I think I mentioned here before, about how the gun industry is trying to boost flagging sales by enticing women into gun ownership and hunting. It’s not the other way around. Make no mistake — the increase of women in gun sport is due, in part, possibly large part, to a concerted campaign by those who profit from the carnage we have in this country because of our gun culture.

    Lastly, I’m so glad you refuted the idiotic argument we always hear, about humans being part of the food chain. You said it perfectly. The whole “food chain” argument also flies out the window when they end up victimized by “nature” themselves. As you know, those who inflict violence on others for fun are not so philosophical when the tables are turned.

  3. This is sad. I generally consider women more capable of empathy, yet that seems to be forgotten when given the chance to take the “Be a woman in the outdoors” classes. I agree with the article that hunting might make you more aware of where your dinner comes from. For me, that was one of many reasons why I quit eating meat. I also don’t think this push to get more people into hunting is sustainable. Habitat is being destroyed daily, less habitat means fewer animals. Adding more hunters simply means more competition to kill declining numbers of animals. Animals are also supposed to be managed for the benefit of all Americans, not just the hunters.

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