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

Apply for urban archery deer hunts

LITTLE ROCK — If you’re looking for an extra opportunity to put some meat in the freezer this fall, feed needy Arkansans and help control urban deer populations, now is the time to start planning.

Registration for the 2020 Arkansas Urban Archery Hunts is open until midnight Aug. 12 at https://www.agfc.com/en/hunting/big-game/deer/urban-archery-hunt.

Russellville is included in the areas open for the hunt.

Urban archery hunts are more than an added opportunity for hunters, they’re a sound technique to manage deer populations where they have become too abundant and have caused conflicts with people.

Ralph Meeker, the deer program coordinator for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, says certain wildlife populations have flourished in the last five decades, but there can be a downside. Each year, deer cause thousands of dollars in damage to people’s landscaping and present a danger to motorists in rural neighborhoods.

Archery hunter in tree stand”All wildlife have what is called ‘social carrying capacity,’” Meeker said. “That’s the density of a wildlife population where they begin to become a nuisance or danger. A few areas in Arkansas that have high populations of people in relatively rural settings have reached this threshold, so the AGFC works with those cities and towns to find solutions.”

Urban hunts are one of the best tools wildlife managers can use to reduce these populations without more expensive techniques such as sharpshooters.

Hunting is the most efficient means we have to control deer populations,” Meeker said. “We have hunters who want to help, and the harvest helps control the deer’s numbers.”

Even deer that are not harvested will scatter back to surrounding wildlife habitat once the added hunting pressure is apparent.

“These hunts allow hunters to enjoy their sport while offering an important service to the public and contribute to needy Arkansans throughout the state,” Meeker said. “All hunters must donate their first adult deer harvested to Arkansas Hunters Feeding the Hungry.”

Meeker works with the Arkansas Bowhunters Association and city officials to coordinate the hunts throughout the state. Hunters who participate in the hunts must attend an orientation where they must pass a proficiency test with the archery equipment they intend to use during the hunt. An orientation fee is collected, which covers the insurance policy for the hunt most cities require.

Meeker says the added attraction of an early September hunt also helps drive people to participate.

“Urban hunts open Sept. 1, so they’re the best chance an Arkansas hunter has at getting a buck in velvet, which is on some hunter’s bucket lists,” Meeker said. “Early season hunting isn’t for everyone, but the hunts continue all the way through the end of February for some locations, giving hunters plenty of time to harvest an urban deer.”

Bowhunting qualifierAll urban hunts follow stringent guidelines to ensure the safety of hunters and local landowners is maintained, some of these guidelines differ from hunt to hunt. In addition to orientations and shooting proficiency tests, all hunters must have passed the International Bowhunters Education Program course to participate.

Deer harvested during urban hunts do not count toward a hunter’s seasonal limit. There are no limits to the number of deer that can be harvested in urban hunts and all antler restrictions are lifted. All deer harvested must still be checked to the appropriate urban deer zone.

OVERSET FOLLOWS:Additional hunting areas are Fairfield Bay, Cherokee Village, Horseshoe Bend, Heber Springs, Helena/West Helena, Hot Springs Village, Bull Shoals, and Lakeview.

https://www.boonevilledemocrat.com/sports/20200609/apply-for-urban-archery-deer-hunts

Arkansas Online Editorial Opposes Turkey Drop


<http://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2017/oct/17/find-a-better-way-20171017/?f=opinion>

*”We’ve always done it this way. Just because it’s always*
* been done that way doesn’t mean a tradition should continue.” *
– Arkansas Online

Posted: 10/17/2017
<http://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2017/oct/17/find-a-better-way-20171017/?f=opinion#comments>

Dear Friends of UPC,

Thank you all for writing and phoning Yellville, Arkansas public officials
for
months in advance this year and in previous years, in response to our Alerts
(Tell Yellville to Stop Dropping Turkeys from Airplanes
<http://www.upc-online.org/turkeys/170727_tell_yellville_to_stop_dropping_turkeys_from_airplanes.html>),
urging the town to
eliminate the sadistic “turkey drop” from its annual festival, now in its
50th
year. Today’s Editorial in Arkansas Online (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette)
fortunately opposes what it calls the “turkey toss” as “cruel,” while
unfortunately suggesting setting caged turkeys around town and opening them
for
the turkeys to come out and be chased down by townspeople as “more humane,
and
sporting” before slaughtering them. (The ritual foreplay of throwing turkeys
from airplanes, buildings and stages is supposed to culminate in a
“wholesome”
family slaughtering of the birds who manage to live through these
preliminaries.
See for example the article linked to in Yellville, Arkansas: A Sad, Bad
Place
<http://www.upc-online.org/turkeys/171016_yellville_arkansas-a_sad_bad_place.html>
Oct. 16, 2017).

While the *Arkansas Democrat-Gazette* and its online version, Arkansas
Online, do
not publish Letters to the Editor from out-of-state writers, they do post
comments from people outside of Arkansas, so today I posted this comment
following the newspaper’s “Editorial: Find a better way”:
___________

*Karen Davis says . . .*

Thank you for speaking out against dropping turkeys from moving aircraft
from a
height to which even wild turkeys never ascend. Nor did turkeys evolve in
Nature
to be dropped from any height but, rather, they evolved to take off from the
ground or a branch, which is totally different, biologically, from being
dropped, whether from an airplane or the top of a building. In addition to
the
height from which the turkeys are being forced out of the plane, they
experience
terrific wind pressure produced by the plane. There is nothing in these
birds’
natural behavior, genetics, or evolution enabling them to comprehend or cope
with this situation. Nor is chasing terrified turkeys around town “humane.”
Imagine grown-ups teaching their children to enjoy terrorizing, injuring and
killing turkeys (or any fellow creature) for the pleasure of making them
suffer.
Most of the comments posted following your recent article about the “turkey
drop” exhibit a very ugly, mean-spirited attitude of ignorance and
viciousness
toward the birds. The “turkey drop” speaks poorly for Yellville. The very
word
“Yellville” connotes cruelty and pitiless pathology.

Thank you again for taking a stand.

Sincerely,
Karen Davis, President of United Poultry Concerns,
author of More Than a Meal: The Turkey in History, Myth, Ritual, and
Reality.
___________

*More Than a Meal*

This scholarly and authoritative book examines the cultural and literal
history, as well as the natural history and biological needs and concerns
of turkeys. And much more!

Now available as a Free PDF
<http://www.upc-online.org/turkeys/more_than_a_meal.pdf