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

Hunters careless, inhumane

Letter in answer to:

Maine Voices: Actions of select few unfairly portray hunters as careless, inhumane

Dear Editor,

Well, Taylor LaFlamme was right about one thing in her January 27 “Maine Voices” piece, “Actions of a select few unfairly portray hunters as careless, inhumane.” The one thing she was right about was that, “..everyone has their opinion,” and hers was consistent with the opinion piece’s misguided title. 

I’m not defending Maine drivers, but when comparing auto versus hunting accidents it’s only fair to consider how many vehicles are on the roads in a given year and how many hunters are in the woods during hunting season. Granted, there are times when it seems there are a lot of hunters out there, but so far there isn’t the need for speed limits or traffic lights to prevent a pileup.

Yes, everyone has the right to their opinion, but perhaps in light of some of the recent well publicized hunting accidents, opinions in defense of hunting are best kept to oneself.

The piece ends with the inarguable statement, “Hunting…is a way of meeting new people and making new memories.” The question is, why do those memories have to revolve around killing?

Jim Robertson

Committee to Abolish Sport Hunting    

For Hunters in the Woods, a Quiet Killer: Tree Stands

Chris Nutter surveys the land around him in rural upstate New York from a tree stand, which are popular among deer hunters. At least five people have died this year statewide while hunting from tree stands and many more have been injured. CreditBrett Carlsen for The New York Times

Jeff Callahan can still recall the morning he dozed off while hunting deer from a homemade tree-stand in upstate New York.

The resulting fall — a 13-foot plunge that caused a spinal injury and left him paralyzed from the neck down — was avoidable, he said, if only he had followed precautions and tethered himself to the tree with a safety line.

“Some guys think they’re indestructible, and that’s what I thought too,” said Mr. Callahan, 57, who now hunts from his wheelchair. Even aiming with his teeth and firing with the help of a breathing tube, he has bagged many deer with both shotgun and crossbow.

“They call me one-shot,” he said.

While the topic of dangerous hunting mishaps has long seemed synonymous with gun-related incidents, there is now a more deadly category: falls from tree stands that have become increasingly popular among gun and bow hunters seeking a high vantage point.

Tree stand mishaps are not a new phenomenon, but have become chronic enough that, this year for the first time, New York State’s Department of Environmental Conservation, which regulates hunting, has begun collecting information about such accidents from local authorities to better monitor and study the problem, said the agency’s commissioner, Basil Seggos.

Continue reading the main story

As this year’s deer hunting season winds down, New York State officials report only one gun-related fatality among hunters this year, while at least five people have died statewide while hunting from tree stands — many more have been injured.

Continue reading the main story

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“Some guys think they’re indestructible, and that’s what I thought too,’’ said Jeff Callahan, who was left paralyzed from the neck down after he fell from a tree stand while hunting deer.CreditBrett Carlsen for The New York Times

State officials reported one tree stand death last year, but said that there may have been others, since they had not started to systematically begin tracking the incidents. Mr. Seggos said he had “heard at least anecdotally that a number of people die or get injured each year” from tree stand falls and mishaps, but lacked hard information.

“I wanted to begin tracking them, to see where the problems were,” he said.

Gun mishaps, the longtime scourge of hunting season, have been declining for decades because of safety awareness initiatives such as orange clothing meant to deter accidental shootings, said Glen Mayhew, president of the national Tree Stand Safety Awareness Foundation.

“But we’ve seen tree stand incidents go up, because although people know they should wear harnesses, many still aren’t wearing them,” said Dr. Mayhew, adding that the mishaps continue despite persistent efforts to educate hunters about tree stand safety, the most important rule being the use of a safety line and harness attached to the tree both while in the stand and while climbing in and out.

Several thousand hunters fall from tree stands each year nationwide — with roughly 4,000 falls in 2015 — and states where hunters use tree stands typically have a fatality or two a year, Dr. Mayhew said. “So to see five fatalities from one state in a year, is an outlier, or unusually high,” he said of New York’s figures.

Mr. Seggos said his agency relies on some 2,500 teaching volunteers for its hunter safety program, and that about 45,000 hunters took advantage of the 1,500 courses given this year whose curriculum includes safety instruction on the stands, which often consist of a seat and a small platform that are fastened onto a tree’s trunk above brush lines and above an animal’s ability to spot or smell a hunter.

Also, he said, the agency has created online videos on tree stand safety, posted online notifications, and put out advisories on social media.

Continue reading the main story

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Mr. Nutter, a hunter who lives near Syracuse and teaches bow hunting safety, said he knows numerous hunters who have suffered broken limbs and spinal injuries from falls. CreditBrett Carlsen for The New York Times

Of the five tree stand fatalities in New York in recent months, one is still under investigation, officials said. One was caused by the failure of a tree stand, and another victim likely fell while entering or exiting a stand, a particularly common circumstance. The two other victims fell after having heart attacks, state officials said.

For some hunters, carrying equipment long distances to hunting locations and then climbing up to the stand can increase the chances of a heart attack, Dr. Mayhew said. Strapping into the stand can help a hunter survive a heart attack by enabling him to phone or signal for help, he said.

Dr. Michael F. Kamali, who runs the emergency department at the University of Rochester Medical Center, said hunters are brought in perhaps once a week — usually still in their hunting outfits — after tree stand falls, with injuries that range from “minor to very significant to life threatening.”

Chris Nutter, 57, a hunter who lives near Syracuse, and teaches bow hunting safety said he knows numerous hunters who have suffered broken limbs and spinal injuries from falls. Two hunters died in tree stand accidents in 2015 in Onondaga County, which includes Syracuse, he said.

As a young man, Mr. Nutter said he sometimes felt impervious enough to neglect safety practices — “I was 8 foot tall and bulletproof” — and fell twice from his stand while in his 20s, but avoided lasting injury.

Many hunters called tree stand accidents far more frequent than official figures indicate, because hunters are often reluctant to tell medical or law enforcement that they fell from a stand.

Continue reading the main story

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Mr. Nutter heads into the woods in northern New York. As a young man, Mr. Nutter said he sometimes felt impervious enough to neglect safety practices — “I was 8 foot tall and bulletproof” — and fell twice from his stand while in his 20s, but avoided lasting injury. CreditBrett Carlsen for The New York Times

“A hunter who goes to the E.R. is not going to admit they fell out of a tree stand,” said Bill Conners, 71, a lifelong hunter from Dutchess County who writes about conservation issues and serves as a regional director of the New York State Conservation Council. “Either out of embarrassment, or because they didn’t tell their wives or bosses they went hunting.”

In fact, many hunters favor hunting alone and lose communication after a fall, especially if cellphone service is spotty.

Years ago, many hunters built wooden tree stands, but affordable manufactured stands have become the norm. Many are left up year-round and become weakened over time, Mr. Conners said.

Hunters often access the stands by rudimentary ladders, which can be tricky while wearing bulky winter clothing and lugging equipment, especially in icy conditions. Falls can be caused by alcohol, fatigue, sudden moves with a weapon and even excitement.

“When deer comes along, or a squirrel jumps onto your head, you might suddenly take a step back and you’re not standing on anything anymore,” said David Hartman, the president of New York State Whitetail Management Coalition.

It was sleepiness that caused Mr. Callahan’s fall in 1986. He now hunts from his wheelchair with the assistance of a friend. He finds flat areas in the woods or a field to roll onto, and behind camouflage material, rests his crossbow or shotgun onto a shooter’s rest. He aims it with a bar controlled by his teeth and activates the trigger with an air tube.

“I‘ve talked to so many hunters who have fallen out of trees,” he said. “So the first thing I tell any hunter is to learn from my experience and put your safety strap on.”

Response letter to: If you love deer, you must go hunting

Dear Editor,

A much more fitting title for Noah Comet’s editorial, “If you love deer, you must go hunting” would have been, “If you love driving blindly, pedal to the metal, you must shoot a deer before you hit one with your precious car.”

Indeed, the gist of the piece seemed to be: ‘Our monstrous automobiles are here to stay, so everything else best get out of the way–before we run them over. Come to think if it, as much as hunting is costly and barbaric, we might as well just shoot them first. We’ll say we’re doing them a favor.’

Nowhere does the editorial ask us to drive more defensively or dare to ask drivers to slow the heck down, before someone (or something, if you prefer) ends up dead.

But ironically and as much as I hate to admit it, I found myself agreeing with an occasional line. For instance, the notion that ‘there are too many deer’ is, as Mr. Comet rightly points out, a “ludicrous argument.” His line that, “Deer haven’t overpopulated; we have” says it all.

Jim Robertson

President,  Committee to Abolish Sport Hunting

Willsboro men charged after hunting accident

ELIZABETHTOWN — A Willsboro resident accidentally shot another man while they were hunting illegally, State Police say.

About 5 p.m. Dec. 14, Elizabethtown Community Hospital contacted State Police to report what was said to be an accidental, self-inflicted gunshot wound sustained by Waite E. Denton, 27, of Willsboro.

The accident happened while he was hunting with Andrew L. Rolston, 33, police said in a news release.

“Denton initially claimed to us that he shot himself” while they were in a wooded area off Crowningshield Lane in the Town of Elizabethtown, State Police Troop B Public Information Officer Jennifer Fleishman said Wednesday.

“A subsequent investigation revealed Denton and Rolston were illegally hunting deer when Rolston accidentally shot Denton with a 20-gauge shotgun,” the release said.

“The slug entered his right bicep and exited through his right tricep before grazing his upper back.”

Rolston drove Denton to Elizabethtown Community Hospital. He was later flown to the University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington with non-life-threatening injuries.

Fleishman said Rolston was treated there and has been released from the hospital.

 

CHARGES

State Police charged Rolston with second-degree assault, a felony, and second-degree reckless endangerment, fourth-degree criminal possession of a weapon and making a punishable false written statement, all misdemeanors.

He was arraigned in Westport Town Court, where he was released on his own recognizance.

Rolston is due in Elizabethtown Town Court at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 28, and in Lewis Town Court at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 26.

Denton was charged with making a punishable false written statement.

He was released on an appearance ticket, due back in Lewis Town Court at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 26.

 

HUNTING OFF SEASON

Deer-hunting season in the northern zone of New York state runs from Oct. 21 to Dec. 3, according to the State Department of Environmental Conservation website, so Denton and Rolston were allegedly 11 days past season.

Additional New York State Environmental Conservation Law charges are pending.

The investigation was conducted jointly with DEC Environmental Conservation Police.

Christmas comes early for Maine deer: hunting season’s over

 

https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/christmas-comes-early-for-maine-deer-hunting-seasons-over/

AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — The final phase of Maine’s annual deer hunt is coming to an end for 2017.

Saturday is the last day of the year on which it is legal to hunt deer via muzzleloaders or archery. The deer hunting season began three months ago this year.

Hunters are limited in terms of where they can harvest deer. Muzzleloader hunters can only hunt in 14 of the state’s 29 wildlife management districts. Archery is limited to designated areas around a handful of urban locales in the state.

Maine has separate hunting seasons for firearms, archery and muzzleloaders. The state gave out thousands more firearms permits this year because wildlife managers said the deer population could withstand more hunting. Mild winters have led to high levels of deer survival in recent years.

Hunter who received ‘nasty’ death threats is now an inspiration to female hunting community

http://www.foxnews.com/great-outdoors/2017/12/07/hunter-who-received-nasty-death-threats-is-now-inspiration-to-female-hunting-community.html

Hunter and advocate Nikki Tate has been feeling a little overwhelmed since an articleabout her love of duck and deer hunting went viral.

“It’s been crazy,” Tate told Fox News. “Both positive and negative, but mostly positive.”

The 27-year-old lawyer had been receiving death threats through her Instagram, which showcases her hunting lifestyle.

“People would send things like, ‘I wish I could do to you what you did to that deer,’ or ‘Karma is a b—-,’” she said.

nikki tate 5

Tate often posts pictures of herself and her hunting dogs posing with carcasses of deer, hogs and waterfowl.  (Nikki Tate)

But Tate, who promotes ethical hunting, says the death threats weren’t shocking.

HUNTER FORCED TO DEFEND HER LIFESTYLE AFTER RECEIVING DEATH THREATS

“People have strong opinions and hunting is a trigger for a lot of people,” Tate said.

“I know other female hunters who have received those kinds of comments, and once I started getting a larger audience [on Instagram], random negative comments would start to trickle in,” she added. “Around 10K followers I would start getting private messages, really nasty and threatening comments.”

nikki tate 1

Tate says she’s been sent “really nasty and threatening comments” due to her lifestyle.  (Nikki Tate)

However, the hostile messages have paled in comparison to the outpouring of support she has received from the hunting community — after the article, her Instagram gained more than 2,000 followers overnight.

“People have messaged me on Instagram saying I am a role model and inspiration, and thanking me for supporting conservation,” she said.

nikki tate 4

Tate tells Fox News she hunts because it lets her know “exactly where my food came from.”  (Nikki Tate)

Also outside of the death threats, her unexpected celebrity has started a respectful dialogue around hunting that she hopes will continue.

“People who don’t agree with me have messaged me and asked me questions about hunting and why I do it. We have had very intellectual conversations — it’s been so rewarding for me.”

HUNTER BAGS TWO ‘BUCKS OF A LIFETIME’ IN SAME WEEK

Now that she’s been pushed into the limelight, Tate says she wants to use the opportunity to further spread her message about conservation and hunting.

“When you kind of get in the public eye and you have an opportunity to spread a message about conservation, take it,” she said. “I’m involved and I love being involved. I want to do something positive with the attention.”

nikki tate 2

“When you kind of get in the public eye and you have an opportunity to spread a message about conservation, take it,” says Tate.  (Nikki Tate)

More: http://www.foxnews.com/great-outdoors/2017/12/07/hunter-who-received-nasty-death-threats-is-now-inspiration-to-female-hunting-community.html

Hunters make the great outdoors war zones

Hunters make the great outdoors war zones

By Nicole Rivard

UPDATE 12/1/17: Hunter Thomas Jadlowski has been charged with second-degree manslaughter and hunting after hours. 

Tis the season for putting your life at risk if you want to go outdoors to walk a dog, ride a bike or hike on public or private land.

That’s because trigger happy hunters are out trying to kill any wildlife in their crosshairs, and no amount of orange clothing is going to make human animals safe.

We are sickened and saddened by the news that Rosemary Billquist, 43, who was just walking her dogs near her western New York home, was fatally shot last week by her hunter neighbor Thomas B. Jadlowski, who told police he mistook her for a deer. He was hunting after sunset, which is prohibited by law in New York, however Jadlowski faces a measly fine not to exceed $250 and 15 days or less in jail, according to an environmental conservation police officer from the NYDEC. Outrageous! (A criminal investigation is also ongoing, so hopefully that will yield some more justice, however it won’t bring Billquist back.)  

And this wasn’t the only hunting accident that involved a non-hunter in the news last week. Police in New Hampshire reported that a woman was shot by a hunter near Elm Brook Park in Hopkinton. Authorities say the woman was riding a mountain bike along a trail when she was shot. The area is used for a variety of outdoor activities including hunting, hiking and biking. Luckily, she is in good condition.

Both incidences highlight how important it is for outdoor enthusiasts and wildlife watchers to call for changes. State wildlife agencies receive funding from hunter license fees and taxes on guns and ammo, a clear conflict of interest that explains why wildlife is not respected and forests and parks are being turned into killing grounds.

We need to vote for politicians who are willing to stand up to the hunting agencies and conservation officers who want to continually expand hunting. We need to tell our local elected officials we do not support hunting in our state forests or parks or in nature preserves where other outdoor activities take place.

Let’s face it, hunting safety is an oxymoron. However, agencies don’t care as they just want more clients. This year New York, where now only 5 percent of the population still hunts, has decided to allow junior hunters (14-15 years old) to take bear as well as deer during the youth firearms hunt and one of the requirements is that both the junior hunter and mentor must wear hunter orange visible from all directions: shirt, jacket or vest with at least 250 square inches of solid or patterned orange (the pattern must be at least 50% orange) OR a hat with at least 50% orange.

How ridiculous! Bullets are color blind.

We hope this latest hunting tragedy will lead to even more people to call on public officials to create hunting free zones in our state parks in forests. In Connecticut, for example, it is possible to reverse a decision and eliminate hunting from an area. In Colorado, a proposal was being considered to eliminate shooting on lands that are less than a half-mile from homes or in areas of highly concentrated recreational use.

Human and non-human animals should not have to senselessly lose their lives to recreational violence called hunting.

Nicole Rivard is editor of Friends of Animal’s quarterly magazine Action Line. She brings 18 years of journalism experience to the front lines, protesting and documenting atrocities against animals.

Proud Montana hunters show their “trophies” of 2017

 Sent  by a friend there wth these words:

“PROUD” MONTANA HUNTERS SHOW THEIR TROPHIES
….Warning!..graphic pictures of dead animals

I’m at a loss for words here…smiling faces showing off a dead animal?…what is wrong with these people? Were they abused as children..WTF?
This is on the front page of the Missoulian newspaper

 

Hunting season 2017 was a big success for many Montana hunters. Readers submitted their photos of this year’s trophies.

Hunter in fatal Chautauqua County hunting accident indicted on manslaughter charge

http://wivb.com/2017/11/30/hunter-in-fatal-chautauqua-county-hunting-accident-charged-with-manslaughter/

Published: 

MAYVILLE, N.Y. (WIVB) – A Chautauqua County hunter who shot and killed his neighbor the day before Thanksgiving, mistaking her for a deer, has been indicted on a manslaughter charge.

Thomas B. Jadlowski, 34, surrendered himself to the Chautauqua County Sheriff’s Office in connection with the Nov. 22 incident.

According to the Chautauqua County Sheriff’s Office, Jadlowski shot and killed Rosemary Billquist, 43, who had been out walking her dogs behind her Sherman home after believing she was a seer.

Rosemary Billquist (right) with her husband, Jamie.

 

Jadlowski was arraigned Thursday in Chautauqua County Court on a two-count indictment, second degree manslaughter and hunting after hours.

DEC’s Environmental Conservation Police officers and Chautauqua County Sheriff’s deputies say the incident occurred just after 5:22 p.m., well beyond the legal close of the daily hunting period at sunset.

Billquist was struck in the hip by the bullet.

“After firing the shot, hearing a scream and finding Ms. Billquist, Mr. Jadlowski immediately called 911,” a press release from the sheriff’s office stated.

Billquist was found by first responders unresponsive about 150 yards behind her home.  She was immediately transported to UPMC Hamot in Erie, Pennsylvania, but despite the efforts of the Sherman Fire EMT’s and Hospital Surgeons, later succumbed to her injuries.

“Today, Mr. Jadlowski is being held accountable for his dangerous and reckless conduct when he shot his neighbor in the dark,” DEC Commissioner Basil Seggos said.

Jadlowski entered a not guilty plea in Chautauqua County Court.

Bail was set at $50,000 cash or $100,000 property. He is due back in court Jan. 29.m

The charges carry a potential prison sentence of five to 15 years if he is found guilty.

MSP: Woman, 18, critically injured in hunting accident, Man shot in both arms in Oxford hunting accident and more…

Hunting Accident:

http://woodtv.com/2017/11/27/msp-woman-18-critically-injured-in-hunting-accident/

An 18-year-old woman from Berrien County is in critical condition after a hunting accident at her home.

Michigan State Police say Delaney Nicole Flagel was unloading her vehicle after hunting when a rifle accidentally fell and fired a round, hitting her in the chest area.

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http://wkrg.com/2017/11/25/bcso-person-shot-in-leg-in-hunting-accident/

The wife of Adam Catrett, Charity, says her husband is stable at USA Medical center.  Catrett was flown there following a hunting accident Saturday morning.  Authorities say Adam Catrett and his father were hunting in the Upper Delta Wildlife Management Area.  They say his father slipped while crossing a creek and his gun accidentally went off.  A bullet caused a significant injury to Adam Catrett’s leg.

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Man shot in both arms in Oxford hunting accident

http://wgme.com/news/local/man-shot-in-both-arms-in-oxford-hunting-accident

The Maine Warden Service says a group of four people were hunting over the weekend, about a quarter mile into the woods, when one of them shot another. (WGME)

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OXFORD (WGME) – A man was shot in both arms in a weekend hunting incident that happened about a mile behind the Oxford Plains Speedway.

The Maine Warden Service says a group of four people were hunting over the weekend, about a quarter mile into the woods, when one of them shot another.

Investigators say it happened around two in the afternoon on Saturday, on land open to hunting.

Corporal John MacDonald says the four people were in the woods hunting deer when one of the hunters fired his rifle.

“The shooter is 21 years old. He is from Oxford,” MacDonald said. “This wasn’t a case where a weapon was, or a firearm was dropped and discharged. It was, we’re thinking this was a hunting related shooting incident where the shooter actually pulled the trigger.”

MacDonald says the victim is 32-year-old James Footman from Paris.

“He sustained some injury, fairly serious injury, to his arms,” MacDonald said.

He says Footman was taken by life-flight to Central Maine Medical Center after a bullet struck both his arms. The hospital says Footman is now in serious condition.

Investigators say all four hunters are cooperating. They say the shooter’s identity will not be released unless charges are filed against him.

CBS 13 spoke to a cousin of James Footman, and she told us the family is not commenting right now about what happened.

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