Rural New Mexicans oppose trapping, too

Las Cruces Sun-News

https://www.lcsun-news.com/story/opinion/2021/01/31/rural-new-mexicans-oppose-trapping-too/4325386001/

This Feb. 20, 2019, file photo, shows a foothold trap intended for bobcats, set by licensed trapper Tom Fisher, on the outskirts of Tierra Amarilla, N.M.

It’s come to our attention that a few prominent voices from the trapping community feel like they can speak for all rural New Mexicans in their quest to continue their grip on safe public lands. We are rural New Mexicans from across the state and we oppose the use of cruel, dangerous traps on public lands.

We have all chosen to live more rural lifestyles for a variety of reasons. Some of us want to be more connected to the land and nature. Some of us want a quieter, slower routine. Some of us want wide open spaces, including safe access to public lands. Some of us are in the country for our livelihood. Among us are educators, artists, authors, farmers and veterans. We come from all walks of life. Some of us are relatively new to New Mexico, some of us have been here for decades, raised our families here and some of us were born here. All of us revere and respect wildlife. And setting indiscriminate leghold traps to kill native animals for fun or money is just as foreign to us as it is to the nearly 70% of New Mexican voters who oppose trapping across the board.

The idea that we support trapping because we live in rural areas is like saying city-dwellers don’t drive trucks. It is preposterous.

One thing that does set us apart from a lot of urban and suburban residents is that we have the unfortunate fate of encountering traps more frequently. Traps are often closer to home for us, quite literally. They lie in wait for unsuspecting paws on state and federal lands that are sometimes adjacent to our homes. Many of us have had awful experiences encountering traps, from our own dogs being caught to finding brutally injured wildlife. If you look at a map of where people like us have had these experiences, the majority are away from the big cities. Rural residents face greater risk of being harmed and traumatized by a trap because we live closer to public lands. We want safe access to those lands, and traps put that safety at risk.https://1991c441286826fe16e9dfbea563a362.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

And, most traps aren’t even necessarily set by rural New Mexicans. The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish sells more trapping licenses to urban New Mexicans than to those who live in rural areas. The notion that trapping is done by rural people and opposed by urban people is laughable.

Rural New Mexicans are a diverse set of folks. And there are plenty of us who do not trap, don’t want anything to do with trapping, and want traps off of public lands. Just like some city-dwellers support trapping (though probably not many since only 22% of voters approve of traps at all), some rural people do too. But don’t let trappers fool you by claiming to speak for all of us.

Should California ban bear hunting?

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By Megan Goldsby KCBS Radio

a day agohttps://omny.fm/shows/kcbsam-on-demand/should-bear-hunting-be-banned/embed?style=cover

A Bay Area state senator is trying to ban bear hunting in California, but the hunting and wildlife lobby is pushing back.

San Francisco State Senator Scott Wiener said the ban on hunting black bears would stop the animal from going the way of the brown bear.

“Brown bears are extinct in California due to being hunted to extinction,” he told KCBS Radio.

Wiener said the ban would follow bans on hunting bobcats in the state, and the use of hounds to track bears while hunting.

“I’m not criticizing anyone for hunting,” the state senator noted. “A lot of people do want to hunt. But, we also have the obligation to take a step back as Californians and look at what our values are. A lot of people are, frankly, surprised to hear that we still allow recreational black bear hunting.”https://246cbe00e86fb69bfa10c02104a82a9d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

Bill Gaines is not one of them. He’s the principal at Gaines and Associates, which lobbies for wildlife-related issues.

Gaines told KCBS Radio that of the 40 senate districts in California, only one of them does not have a bear in it.

“But the other 39 senate districts do have problems with bears, and eliminating the ability to hunt them is going to eliminate the ability to manage them,” he said.https://246cbe00e86fb69bfa10c02104a82a9d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

Gaines said bears have been breaking into cabins in Tahoe and ruining beekeepers’ livings by knocking over their hives.

Plus, he added, money raised by bear hunting supports conservation efforts.

“You have to buy a bear tag,” Gaines said. “They’re roughly about $50, and those monies go into what we call the big game management account, which is administered by the Department of Fish and Wildlife.”https://246cbe00e86fb69bfa10c02104a82a9d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

Wiener doesn’t think that justifies hunting bears.

“We definitely should be funding conservation efforts, but to suggest that the only way we can fund it is by allowing hunting of bears – I just don’t agree with that argument,” he said. “We could also take the position, ‘well, we want more conservation money so let’s quadruple the number of bear tags that we issue

https://www.radio.com/kcbsradio/news/local/should-california-ban-bear-hunting

Squirrel hunting can help those dealing with deer season withdrawal

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

  • By Tommy Braswell Special to The Post and Courier
  • Jan 31, 2021Updated1 hr ago

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Scott Hammond extends his hunting season by targeting squirrels. Provided photo

Scott Hammond extends his hunting season by targeting squirrels. Provided photo Subscribe today for $2.29 / week

https://www.postandcourier.com/tideline_magazine/outdoors/squirrel-hunting-can-help-those-dealing-with-deer-season-withdrawal/article_d2da4c54-6253-11eb-b4c3-97e37b5bf6a3.html

For many South Carolina hunters the end of deer season arrives much too quickly.

Scott Hammond is one of those people who can’t spend enough time in the woods. During the past season the Colleton County resident hunted deer 107 times.

“It was a good season, and I saw a lot of deer,” he said. But hunting that many times still leaves him hungering for more. He fills that void by hunting squirrels.https://ba9177152591100fa02ab40df8d3b5e8.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

“I love squirrel hunting. It’s a great way to kind of wind your deer season down and get rid of those withdrawals,” Hammond said. “It’s a wonderful time of year to be…

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Massive winter storm slams the Northeast and could bury NYC in 2 feet of snow

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

https://www.cnn.com/2021/02/01/weather/noreaster-winter-storm-snow-new-york-washington-dc-boston/index.html

By Ralph Ellis and Gene Norman, CNN Meteorologist

Updated 1:52 PM ET, Mon February 1, 2021

Powerful Nor'easter could bring record snow to the Northeast

    Powerful Nor’easter could bring record snow to the Northeast02:06

    (CNN)The first major winter storm of 2021 blasted New York City and other parts of the the mid-Atlantic and Northeast on Monday, snarling transportation, closing government offices and shutting down coronavirus vaccination sites.The combination of heavy snow, gusty winds and coastal flooding was expected to make travel anywhere from dangerous to impossible in much of the region Monday and could knock out power over a wide area.”I want New Yorkers to hear me loud and clear — stay home and off the roads,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in declaring a state of emergency for 44 counties.This could be a historic snowstorm. As of 1 p.m., Central Park had reported 13.3 inches of snow (8 inches in the last 6 hours) and it…

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    Poland finds first case of COVID-19 in mink

    Author of the article:ReutersReutersPublishing date:Feb 01, 2021  •  7 hours ago  •  1 minute read

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    WARSAW — Poland has found its first case of COVID-19 in mink, the agriculture ministry said, raising fears of costly culls in an industry that counts over 350 farms in the country.

    With new variants of the coronavirus threatening global efforts to get the pandemic under control, authorities in several countries have begun mass culls of the animals due to fears of a mutated strain of the illness being transmitted to humans.Impaired driving charges in northern Ontario surge by 50 per cent in 2020 https://c5x8i7c7.ssl.hwcdn.net/vplayer-parallel/20201216_1412/ima_html5/index.htmlhttps://c5x8i7c7.ssl.hwcdn.net/vplayer-parallel/20201216_1412/videojs/show.html?controls=1&loop=30&autoplay=0&tracker=e6791365-0a29-412a-bb47-d1cf2908b27f&height=218&width=387&vurl=%2F%2Fa.jsrdn.com%2Fvideos%2Fcdgv_nationalpost%2F20210201061542_60179b47850f9%2Fcdgv_nationalpost_trending_articles_20210201061542_60179b47850f9_new.mp4&poster=%2F%2Fa.jsrdn.com%2Fvideos%2Fcdgv_nationalpost%2F20210201061542_60179b47850f9%2Fcdgv_nationalpost_trending_articles_20210201061542_60179b47850f9_new.jpg

    Late on Sunday the ministry said in a statement it had been informed by veterinary inspectors on Saturday of a case in Kartuzy county in northern Poland.

    “I hope this is a single case, although we must take all measures to limit possible transmission of the virus,” Deputy Health Minister Waldemar Kraska told local broadcaster Radio Gdansk on Monday, adding that all mink at the affected farm would be culled.

    Denmark, the world’s top exporter of mink furs, ordered a cull of the country’s entire population of some 17 million mink in 2020, and in January announced it would compensate farmers with up to 19 billion Danish crowns ($3.09 billion).

    In a statement sent to state-run news agency PAP, representatives of the Polish fur industry said the state was not offering any compensation for culled animals, and that they would launch a class action lawsuit demanding damages.

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    The agriculture ministry did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

    The General Veterinary Inspectorate said in a statement it was investigating whether the farm had followed sanitary regulations and that possible compensation or penalties would depend on its findings.

    The Regional Veterinary Inspectorate in Gdansk said four samples from the farm had tested positive on Saturday, and that 5,845 mink were in the area affected by the outbreak.

    Activists Occupy Site of Proposed Lithium Mine in Nevada

    Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

    ByKollibri terre Sonnenblume, originally published byMacska Moksha Press

    On Friday, January 15th, two activists drove eight hours from Eugene, Oregon, to a remote corner of public land in Nevada, where they pitched a tent in below-freezing temperatures and unfurled a banner declaring: “Protect Thacker Pass.” You’ll be forgiven if you’ve never heard of the placeit’s seriously in the booniesbut these activists, Will Falk and Max Wilbert, hope to make it into a household name.

    One of the activists is Will Falk, a writer and lawyer who helped bring a suit to US District Courtseeking personhood for the Colorado Riverin 2017. He describes himself as a “biophilic essayist” and he certainly lyrical in describing the area where they set up:

    “Thacker Pass is a quintessential representation of the Great Basin’s specific beauty. Millions of years…

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    Arizona regulators to weigh ban on trail cameras for hunting

    Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

    Share   BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
    JANUARY 30, 2021 AT 11:24 AM(U.S. Forest Service Photo)

    TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Arizona regulators plan to consider prohibiting motion-activated trail cameras for hunting, with supporters saying the ban would allow wildlife to reach watering holes and give animals a fighting chance to live another day.

    Animals can be deterred from using scarce water sources in drought-stricken areas because so many people place and check on remote cameras, the Arizona Daily Star reported.

    “The technology has gotten much cheaper, and it has been proliferating in use,” said Kurt Davis, chairman of the Arizona Game and Fish Commission. “There are some that will have water holes with 30 to 40 cameras on them.”

    The commission plans to vote at a March 19 meeting in Bullhead City on a proposed rule that, if adopted, would not…

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