Early hunting season to begin for wood ducks, teal

Photo copyright Jim Robertson

Photo copyright Jim Robertson

Canada geese are currently being hunted in Tenn.

The Associated Press, September 9, 2013

Early hunting season for wood ducks and teal begins this week.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) – Early hunting season for wood ducks and teal begins this week.

According to the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency, the season runs from Saturday to Sept. 18 with a daily bag limit of four, not to exceed two wood ducks.

Hunters must have a valid state hunting license in their possession as well as a Tennessee Migratory Bird Permit.

Hunters aged 16 and older also must have a Federal Duck Stamp.

The early hunting season for Canada geese began Sept. 1. It continues through Sept. 15 with a daily bag limit of five.

More information on Tennessee’s waterfowl season can be found on the TWRA website at http://www.tnwildlife.org under the “for hunters” section.

Information on the 2013-14 late waterfowl seasons will be available in late September.

The “Conservationists” are about to go hunting – again

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

I never meant this website to become a sounding board for a debate on the appropriateness of hunting as exemplary human behavior. However, I have received so many emails alleging that hunters are conservationists, I feel compelled to offer a few comments that hopefully some of the email writers may consider.
Conservation, according to my dictionary, is the act of conserving; prevention of injury, decay, waste, or loss; preservation, as conservation of wildlife.
The word conservation has been hijacked by people who take pleasure in doing the exact opposite of the definition. They inflict injury, kill and maim without any emotional regret of compassion, and lay waste to entire flocks of wild creatures every season. Hunting is bloody, emotionless killing for pleasure, and changing the description to “recreational opportunity” does not change the act. Nor does the use of “harvesting” make migrating waterfowl into a crop. Nor does describing a hunter as conservationist make that true. 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.
Your email comments talked about hunting’s wonderful heritage, all the land hunters paid for with “duck stamps” and how no species can thrive without scientific management. You have bought into the justification propaganda the NRA fashions to sell more guns and ammo. All the land hunters may have helped set aside does not justify killing the animals that occupy that land — for their own good.
Cruelty by any other name is still cruelty.

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.