Illinois Officials Warn Hunters After Spike in Tree Stand Accidents
Reply
In Nunningen, activists filmed a driven hunt. Several deer apparently fled into the village. Animal rights activists are calling it animal cruelty – David Clavadetscher of the militant hunting association Jagd Schweiz rejects the criticism.
Editorial staff, November 15, 2025
https://wildbeimwild.com/en/the-misleading-statements-by-hunting-association-switzerland-boss-david-clavadetscher/
Follow Us

illustration
From the outside, hobby hunting often appears to be an orderly ritual: men and women in green, well-rehearsed procedures, alleged precision and traditional knowledge.
Listening to the words of David Clavadetscher, Managing Director of Jagd Schweiz, one could almost believe that hobby hunting is a harmonious, safe and almost gentle intervention in nature.
But anyone who looks more closely and takes scientific findings, documented incidents, and real-life experiences seriously will realize that a large part of this portrayal is simply untenable. And sometimes it’s even the opposite of reality.
In an article on 20min.ch , Clavadetscher emphasizes that driven hunts are “calm” and “controlled.” However, for the animals, there is absolutely nothing calm about them.
Wildlife research is clear: driven hunts – especially those involving dogs – are among the most severe stressors that deer and other game can be exposed to. Measurable spikes in stress hormones, panicked flight reactions, disorientation, and increased risk of injury are scientifically documented. Stress hormones influence survival processes: cortisol and adrenaline affect metabolism, and increased activity before the shot can already cause changes in muscles, negatively impacting meat quality. Game from driven hunts shows up to 10 times higher cortisol levels than animals from quiet, controlled hunts. Game from driven hunts exhibits higher lipid oxidation and sometimes lighter-colored meat. This indicates stress before death. Intense flight/stress → glycogen depletion → risky pH values (DFD meat).
When a deer, in mortal fear, runs through forests, across meadows, and occasionally even into villages because of barking dogs and armed beaters, it is above all one thing: pure stress. A process that has nothing to do with calm, but rather with fear, exhaustion, and the survival instinct.
Clavadetscher’s ignoring of these facts and instead invoking a “quiet hunt” is not only a trivialization, it is an attempt to defuse the social debate before it can even begin.
Fifteen years ago, the IG Wild beim Wild (Wild with Wild) documented driven hunts in Graubünden during special snow hunts, using cars and cell phones by amateur hunters. Horrific images that one never forgets. Much of what happened was illegal and simply bestial.
The statement that wild animals don’t flee into settlements because of recreational hunting is so sweeping that it almost sounds cynical. The reality is quite different: Deer, stags, and wild boar repeatedly find themselves in populated areas under the stress of hunting. Not because they want to, but because they are literally suffocated in the forest. In doing so, they cross roads with hunting dogs in tow, causing numerous traffic accidents.
Whether in Switzerland, France, or Germany: Cases are documented everywhere in which wild animals appear in gardens, backyards, or even school grounds because they panic during driven hunts. In a densely populated country like Switzerland, this is no wonder: When the forest is small, the hunting parties large, and the dogs fast, the animal has no choice but to go wherever it can, even if that means through a residential area.
Clavadetscher’s statement not only contradicts scientific findings on escape behavior, it also contradicts common sense once again.
Perhaps the most persistent narrative of the hunting lobby is that hobby hunters are highly precise and that misfires are practically impossible.
But the reality is more sobering and crueler for the animals: wounding shots are an integral part of hunting practice. Even under optimal conditions, animals are regularly not killed instantly, but wounded, continue running, and suffer for minutes to hours, sometimes days, before they are found or die a painful death.
Hobby hunters know this. Authorities know this. Some cantons even factor in additional losses as a general rule, because they know full well that not every shot animal is found.
Against this background, Clavadetscher’s statement seems like a shield: not based on facts, but motivated by communication.
Anyone who admits that animals are regularly shot and bleed to death while fleeing would inevitably have to ask themselves: Is this cruel practice still justifiable in the 21st century?
This statement is often trotted out when criticism arises regarding the public safety of recreational hunting. But the truth is more complicated and uncomfortable.
Even though individual categories of accidents are rare, there is a long list of documented incidents:
In light of this reality, the statement “Nothing will happen” is not only wrong, it is irresponsible.
Here, too, only a fraction of the truth is presented: young animals are no longer dependent on their mothers in autumn, depending on whom you ask. In the canton of Jura, recreational hunting of deer and other animals only begins at the start of October because the mothers are still lactating. In Graubünden, however, the slaughter always begins a month earlier. Thus, a vast patchwork of cruel regulations exists throughout Switzerland for many animal species and their young. In spring, recreational hunters stage media-friendly rescues of fawns from being killed by mowing machines. A few months later, they treacherously and cowardly shoot around 10,000 fawns in the back each year.
At the same time, the most energy-critical time of the year begins for wild animals.
Hunting stress means:
What Clavadetscher omits: Every escape costs energy, which in winter can mean the difference between life and death.
David Clavadetscher tries to portray recreational hunting as a modern, safe, and humane practice. However, his statements hardly stand up to scrutiny. They are based on a mixture of downplaying the risks, omissions, and tradition, not on biology, ethology, or safety statistics. This is due to the abysmal training for hunting licenses and a lack of continuing education. The IG Wild beim Wild (Wildlife Interest Group) repeatedly hears from recreational hunters, who have at least some understanding of biology, that hunting training is a disgrace.
Recreational hunting is not a harmless hobby. It is not a peaceful ritual. It is not a stress-free event for wild animals.
It is a practice that panics, injures, and kills animals, and in doing so, repeatedly endangers humans and pets.
The public has a right to honesty. And anyone who tries to hide reality behind feel-good, green-tinted rhetoric must be asked: Whose interests are truly at stake here? Those of the animals or those of the hobby hunters?
In the chaos that nature finds itself in after decades of being managed and cared for by hobby hunters , the proportion of threatened species is higher in Switzerland than in any other country in the world. For decades, these contract killers have been creating an ecological imbalance in the cultivated landscape, with sometimes dramatic consequences (protective forests, diseases, agricultural damage, and much more). Over a third of plant, wildlife and fungal species are considered threatened. Switzerland also ranks last in Europe when it comes to designating protected areas for biodiversity. It is precisely these circles of hobby hunters, with their lobbying efforts, who have been responsible for this situation for decades through politics, media, and legislation. They are the ones who notoriously block modern, ethical improvements in animal welfare and sabotage serious animal and species conservation. Hobby hunters regularly oppose the creation of more national parks in Switzerland because their concern is not nature, biodiversity, species conservation, or animal welfare , but rather the pursuit of their perverse, bloody hobby.
Did you know…