Exposing the Big Game

Forget Hunters' Feeble Rationalizations and Trust Your Gut Feelings: Making Sport of Killing Is Not Healthy Human Behavior

Exposing the Big Game

Hunter shot and killed by another hunter in Maine

https://wtop.com/national/2017/10/hunter-shot-and-killed-by-another-hunter-in-maine/

 HEBRON, Maine (AP) — Authorities say a hunter has been shot and killed by another hunter in Hebron, Maine.

The Maine Warden Service says the dead hunter is a woman in her mid-30s.

 Authorities tell the Lewiston Sun Journal that the shooter was a man who was with a different hunting party out on Saturday morning. He has been identified and was being interviewed by the Warden Service.

Hebron is about 48 miles north of Portland. Saturday was “Maine Resident Only Day” for moose and deer hunting.

Maine’s last hunting fatality was in 2012. William Briggs, of Windham, Maine, was later convicted of manslaughter in the shooting death of Peter Kolofsky of Sebago, Maine.

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Information from: Sun-Journal, http://www.sunjournal.com

Tell the Senate to Protect Arctic National Wildlife Refuge!  

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Stop a Budget that Supports Drilling in the Refuge!

Time is growing short to make your voice heard as Republicans are pushing aggressively to open the Refuge to full scale oil and gas development.

At stake is the fate of the Porcupine Caribou herd, grizzly and polar bears, hundreds of thousands of snow geese, muskox, wolves, snowy owls, whales. Arctic National Wildlife Refuge remains one of the wildest and most pristine areas in North America.

It truly remains America’s Serengeti!

Please call your Senators today and tell them:
DO NOT support a federal budget that allows drilling in the Arctic Refuge.

United States Capitol switchboard (202) 224-3121

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Deer hunting myths ignore science

http://www.democratandchronicle.com/story/opinion/guest-column/2017/10/25/lyme-disease-not-impacted-hunting-deer/795150001/?fb_action_ids=10203509509214287&fb_action_types=og.comments&fb_source=other_multiline&action_object_map=%5B1490824914334566%5D&action_type_map=%5B%22og.comments%22%5D&action_ref_map=%5B%5D

by Ashley Pankratz, Guest EssayistPublished 10:21 a.m. ET Oct. 25, 2017 | Updated 10:33 a.m. ET Oct. 25, 2017

The recent article, “It’s that Deer Time of Year,” offers tips to help drivers avoid hitting deer, but tells an incomplete story. While mating season initiates deer movement, hunting practices, too, are to blame. The Erie Insurance Group cites a five-fold increase in deer-related accidents on opening day—a statistic that has nothing to do with rut.

Unfortunately, the article also presents a platform for the Quality Deer Management Association, but offers no dissenting perspective. Despite the benign moniker, QDMA is dedicated to producing trophy-quality bucks through selective hunting and habitat manipulation. Like the DEC, QDMA seeks to normalize the recreational killing of wildlife through carefully constructed arguments which, to an undiscerning ear, sound like science.

The DEC’s recent Deer Management Study finds that “hunters prefer to harvest older bucks.” In other words, they pursue the biggest rack, despite the fact that killing bucks does not determine population. Dr. Allen Rutberg, a proponent of the newly EPA-approved deer contraceptive PZP, observes, “The most visible weakness in the assertion that hunting is necessary to control deer populations is that it has largely failed to do so… Just because deer are being killed doesn’t mean that deer populations are being controlled.”

Sadly, the DEC has done nothing to dispel the myth that deer numbers affect the incidence of Lyme disease in humans, while experts, including those from the Harvard School of Public Health, explicitly state otherwise. Deer neither carry nor transmit the disease, and not a single peer-reviewed study correlates deer culling with Lyme disease reduction in humans. There is, however, an abundance of data to suggest that killing deer has no impact on Lyme disease transmission.

What does impact tick population is the fox and lowly opossum. Opossums consume as many as 5,000 ticks per season, and foxes, who consume rodents, are essential to controlling the disease. But from late October until mid-February, New York hunters and trappers are permitted to kill an unlimited number of either species in any manner they see fit, including drowning, suffocating, and shooting. Coyotes, also essential to balanced ecosystems, are blamed by hunters for suppressing deer population, and endure six months of killing. Suggesting that we prevent Lyme disease by killing deer with bows and arrows in suburban backyards, or that we rectify the decline in hunting by encouraging 12-year-olds to shoot animals, is absurd.

Science doesn’t have an agenda, nor is it dependent on the sale of weapons or hunting licenses; but that is how our current system of wildlife management operates. The more we understand interdependency and ecosystem health, and the more diligently we assess the motivations of those who determine wild lives’ fate, the more evident the need for a balanced perspective.

Ashley Pankratz is a wildlife and outdoors enthusiast who lives in Livingston County.

18-year-old delivery driver charged with hitting, killing geese

http://wset.com/news/local/vdgif-18-year-old-delivery-driver-charged-with-hitting-killing-geese

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COLONIAL HEIGHTS, Va. (WSET) – An 18-year-old Jimmy John’s delivery driver has been charged after he hit a gaggle of geese in Colonial Heights, according to the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries.

DGIF officials say the incident took place along Roslyn Road on October 24.

They say Roberto Pietri drove through a gaggle of geese, killing two of them.

VDGIF says Pietri was charged on October 25, after a concerned citizen brought the incident to the department’t attention.

He’s facing three misdemeanor charges: driving with a revoked license, unlawfully hunting and killing a wild animal, and killing migratory game bird in violation of board regulations.

A DGIF spokesperson told WTVR this appeared to be an accident and that Pietri was “unable to stop.”

Father, daughter rescued after hunt

To Alexandria’s horror, her father soon rolled the ATV, disappearing underneath the overturned machine, which was still running…

Father, daughter rescued after hunt
Payette residents Michael Meacham, left, and daughter Alexandria Meacham were both on crutches last week following a weekend hunting trip in Washington County that ended with a search and rescue effort after the father rolled his ATV.

Photo by Rob Ruth | Independent-Enterprise

A hunting trip for three members of a Payette family and a family friend was nearly in the books as a pleasant if uneventful success as night approached on Oct. 15.

Nicole Meacham, one family member who wasn’t on that trip into Washington County, said she received a phone call at home at roughly 8 p.m. from her husband, Michael Meacham, informing her that the hunting party would be loading up soon for the return trip home. First, however, Michael Meacham and the couple’s 16-year-old daughter, Alexandria, needed to retrieve a deer that had been shot minutes earlier by Michael and Nicole Meacham’s 11-year-old son.

Nicole said she received a call later that night from Washington County dispatch informing her that Alexandria had phoned in a report of an ATV accident involving her dad. By now darkness had fallen, the temperature would be dropping to below freezing, and the stranded father and daughter were the focus of a search and rescue effort.

Although Alexandria had barely managed to get enough signal on high ground to place her 911 call, Nicole said, the daughter was also able to receive a text message that Nicole now sent. Nicole asked about Michael’s physical condition. Alexandria texted back with a piece of bad news: Dad had a broken leg.

Nicole said she decided to phone her own father, Payette resident Phil Burley, to have him drive out and participate in the search, especially since Burley was well familiar with the terrain. She said Burley quickly rounded up several friends and headed out.

The deer hunt took place off of Sheep Creek Road and over Dodson Pass, on Bureau of Land Management ground, Michael Meacham said. He said Alexandria had shot her own deer fairly early in the day, but her brother didn’t hit his until shortly before dusk. The deer took off running before it died, traversing approximately a mile of ground, Michael said. He added that they could pretty readily see where it had gone, however, so he decided to take Alexandria with him on his ATV to retrieve the animal while the other adult in the party, friend Josh Lucas, of Payette, went back to the pickup with Meacham’s son, who is also named Michael.

Obstacles

Partway to their intended destination, Meacham and his daughter were slowed by ground obstacles.

“I couldn’t navigate myself through the dark and the rocks and stuff, and I got myself into trouble trying to go through a little draw or ravine,” Meacham recalled.

He instructed Alexandria to wait on higher ground, out of harm’s way, while he tried to drive the ATV out of the draw. Dutifully, she walked up the slope and seated herself on a big rock to watch and wait.

To Alexandria’s horror, her father soon rolled the ATV, disappearing underneath the overturned machine, which was still running.

“I couldn’t see him and I couldn’t hear him,” Alexandria said.

After that very anxious long moment, she did hear him, however. Meacham was at least conscious enough to shout to be heard above the sound of the engine. He told Alexandria to switch off the motor. The father then struggled to slide himself out from underneath the machine and into the open.

Alexandria was meanwhile “freaking out” over the situation, Meacham said. “I drug myself from under there and told her to calm down,” he said. Meacham couldn’t go any farther, however, because his ankle was badly broken.

Alexandria responded well, and began performing the tasks most immediately needed, starting with going to higher ground to try and connect with 911.

The Weiser Signal American later reported that the girl’s call went to Baker County, which relayed the emergency information to Washington County. Matt Thomas, Washington County sheriff, told the Weiser newspaper that, in addition to local resources, the search and rescue effort also featured a helicopter from Two Bear Air Rescue in Kalispell, Montana. The helicopter is specially equipped to hoist an injured person from a constricted space.

Thomas told the Independent-Enterprise the special helicopter was indeed put to use lifting Meacham out of the narrow draw.

Waiting for help

That rescue didn’t occur until Monday morning in daylight, though, and the intervening night was a long one. Meacham said his daughter built a small fire a few different times. The fires furnished only a modest amount of heat. At other times Alexandria slept with her head on her father’s chest. He said he feared that she might suffer physical damage from the cold air if she slept too long, so he periodically awakened her and contrived various errands to get her walking around.

Meacham told the Independent-Enterprise that he was proud of how well his daughter took care of him.

 “She was my hero. … She got all the calls made that she could make. She made sure that I was covered up and warm,” Meacham said.

“I was desperate and I was scared, but I didn’t have a choice. I had to help,” Alexandria said.

Sometime after daybreak, Alexandria encountered her first searcher. It happened to be none other than her grandpa, Phil Burley.

Meacham and Alexandria were soon both transported together via Life Flight to St. Alphonsus in Ontario, where the father had to remain a couple of days.

Recovery

Meacham said he underwent a surgery which included inserting a titanium rod just below his knee and continuing far down his leg. On Friday, two days after he was released, he said he was currently experiencing some pain, but the good news was that his leg was expected to “fully recover in about a year … like it never happened.”

Meacham and Alexandria were both on crutches last week, but they said Alexandria’s injury was only an ankle sprain. She had sustained the injury while stumbling around in the dark the night of their ordeal. On Friday she said the sprain wasn’t serious, and she was nearly ready to put the crutches aside.

Meacham said he drives a tow truck for a living, but he also manages the towing company, so there will be plenty of desk work to keep him busy once he returns to work.

He said one lesson he takes from the hunting trip’s mishap is to delay retrieving an animal if it’s too far away and the sun is going down.

“What I should have done was waited till morning,” he said.