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

CHILD SHOT IN FRANKLIN COUNTY HUNTING ACCIDENT

http://www.kmov.com/story/36935282/child-shot-in-franklin-county-hunting-accident

Posted: Nov 27, 2017 2:09 PM PSTUpdated: Nov 27, 2017 2:12 PM PST

Credit KMOVCredit KMOV

ST. LOUIS (KMOV.com) — A 9-year-old boy was shot in an apparent accident as he and his father were hunting in Franklin County Sunday morning.

Police said the shooting happened in the 1000 block of Sauer Ford Road, near Berger, Missouri. The boy was found in a wooded area on a large farm with a gunshot wound to the shoulder. The injury is not life-threatening.

Police believe the child was in a tree stand when he attempted to hand a 20-gauge shotgun to a family friend. While handing the gun down from the tree stand, the butt-end of the firearm struck a rung on the ladder, causing the gun to discharge, striking the boy.

The child was transported to St. Louis Children’s Hospital.

Hunter survives long fall from tree stand

 

Posted: Nov 10, 2017 3:37 PM PSTUpdated: Nov 10, 2017 3:39 PM PST

 PALO (KWWL) –

An Iowa man is recovering after falling at least 20 ft. from a tree stand while hunting.

Jeff Pavek of Palo broke his neck, back, fractured his skull and sternum and suffered from a collapsed lung from the fall.

He says it’s amazing he is not paralyzed or dead.

“That strap let go around the tree, it was a cable, and I must have went backwards I don’t remember any of that though,” Pavek told us from his hospital room at the University of Iowa Hospital and Clinic.

Pavek’s girlfriend Lori Vandooren-Long started to worry when he didn’t come home so she called his best friend Ron.

The two went out to the hunting site where they made the terrifying discovery.

“He probably laid there for like an hour and 45 minutes and we found him face down,” says Vandooren-Long.

“I told him to turn me over, thank God he didn’t I would have been parialyzed,” says Pavek.

He tells us several of his vertebrates were crushed.

I really realize how close death was and it’s very sad because you just never know,” says Pavek.

“We needed him around for awhile longer,” Vandooren-Long says.

Pavek hopes sharing his story will help other hunters be safe.

“I really strongly recommended when you’re in a tree please wear a vest, a vest for safety. It could have prevented a lot of this,” he tells us.

Pavek believes he is lucky to be alive.

“Real close to being paralyzed or death, so I had both of them and I’m gonna beat them both,” he says.

A Go Fund Me https://www.gofundme.com/75wrs8-jeffs-medical-fund account has been created to help with medical expenses.

Pavek is the third person in Iowa to fall from a tree stand in the last two weeks. . 

A man from Dubuque fell on November 4th while hunting near Garber. 

The next day a man from Adair was found lying at the base of his tree stand. 

Deer hunters advised to make safety a priority when using tree stands

http://nooga.com/210649/deer-hunters-advised-make-safety-priority-using-tree-stands/

A deer hunter using a tree stand. (Photo: Steve Maslowski, USFWS)

The Georgia Department of Natural Resources urges hunters to make safety, especially the use of a full-body fall arrest harness, a priority when hunting from a tree stand.

Gun season for deer hunting begins in both Tennessee and Alabama Nov. 18, and it’s already underway in Georgia.

Between July 1, 2016 and June 30, 2017, there were 33 reported hunting accidents, four of which involved fatalities, in Georgia. Thirty-one of those, with three fatalities, involved tree stand falls.

Dear hunters:

The International Hunter Education Association reports that about 10 percent of hunters who use tree stands are injured each year, with 75 percent of tree stand injuries occurring during the use of fixed positions or climbing stands. That said, most tree stand-related accidents are preventable if hunters take a few safety precautions.

The nonprofit Tree Stand Manufacturers Association offers the following safety reminders (view a couple of TSMA tree stand safety videos here):

Never climb while carrying weapons or gear. Draw them up with a rope after you’re securely seated in the stand.

Never use a stand that has worn, missing or loose parts.

Always wear a full-body harness. Keep the tether as short as possible and clear of neck and shoulders.

If you feel yourself becoming drowsy or sick, get out of the tree. Many falls occur as a result of falling asleep or from sudden illness.

Practice using the harness, including suspending yourself by the tether, before you go hunting. Always have a helper standing by for practice runs.

If you ever fall, first contact a hunting partner and let them know you are attempting self-recovery. Ask them to keep tabs on you with return calls every five minutes.

If you can’t recover and are hanging suspended by the tether, call for help. Keep your legs moving to pump blood out of them. Otherwise, blood pooling in the legs could cause you to pass out.

Manufacturers say the safest recovery via a harness is to climb back into the stand. Only as a last resort should you cut the tether or release the harness buckles.

Additional hunting and firearm safety tips:

Always wear fluorescent orange.

Always be respectful of other hunters and property owners where you hunt.

Stay on established roads. Do not operate any vehicle, including ATVs, within streambeds.

Secure landowner permission before hunting on private property.

Control the direction of the firearm’s muzzle.

—Keep the safety on and fingers off the trigger at all times until ready to shoot.

Identify the target and what is beyond before shooting. Know the identifying features of the game hunted and be absolutely certain that what you are aiming at is that game.

Treat every firearm as if it is loaded.

Be sure the barrel and action are clear of obstructions and that only the proper-size ammunition is used in the firearm.

Always unload a firearm when it is not in use, leave the actions open, and carry empty firearms in a case to and from shooting areas.

Never aim a firearm at anything you do not intend to shoot. Avoid all horseplay with a firearm.

Never climb a tree or fence, or jump a ditch or log, with a loaded firearm.

—Never pull a firearm toward you by the muzzle.

Never shoot a bullet at a flat, hard surface or at water.

Store firearms and ammunition separately and beyond the reach of children and careless adults.

Avoid all alcoholic beverages and drugs before and during shooting.

Hunters hurt in falls from tree stands

http://www.thestarpress.com/story/news/local/2017/10/29/hunters-hurt-falls-tree-stands/811483001/

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PORTLAND, Ind. – For the second consecutive weekend, Jay County has been the scene of an accident involving a hunter falling from a tree stand.

According to an Indiana Department of Natural Resources release, Shawn Thobe, 44, of Fort Recovery, Ohio, on Saturday was climbing his “two-man ladder stand” when he slipped and fell backwards about 12 feet to the ground.

He was taken by ambulance to IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital in Muncie, where he was treated for internal, back and rib injuries.

RELATED:

Hunter injured in fall from tree stand

Teen shot in hunting accident

Conservation officers were called to the scene – in the 4300 block of South Jay County Road 850-E – about 4:20 p.m.

They reported Thobe was wearing a safety harness at the time of the accident, but it was not attached to the tree when he fell.

On Oct. 21, Michael G. Lee, 48, of Bluffton, was injured when he fell about 30 feet from a tree stand in a woods near Pennville.

He was flown by air ambulance to Fort Wayne’s Lutheran Hospital where he was “diagnosed with a fractured vertebrae in his lower back,” a release said.

In that case, conservation officers said, moldy straps on the tree strand had snapped. Lee was not wearing a safety harness.

WI Man dies in hunting accident

http://wsau.com/news/articles/2017/oct/30/man-dies-in-hunting-accident/

hunting accident (Source: Midwest Communications)
hunting accident (Source: Midwest Communications)

HARDING, WI (WSAU)  There was a fatal hunting accident in Lincoln County last week.

The sheriff’s department reports that 59-year-old Donald Peterson from Racine was hunting near the Town of Harding on land off Camp Avenue when his tree stand let loose. He was hunting alone at the time. His body was found hanging from a tree by another hunter on Thursday afternoon.

He was pronounced dead at the scene. It’s not clear exactly when the accident happened.

The Lincoln County Sheriff’s Department and the Department of Natural Resources are investigating the incident.

Another deer hunter falls out of tree stand

http://www.news-sentinel.com/news/local-news/2017/10/15/archery-deer-hunter-seriously-injured-in-tree-stand-fall-in-steuben-county/

ANGOLA — Indiana conservation officers are investigating a fall from a tree stand that seriously injured an archery deer hunter Saturday evening in Steuben County.

Mark Neuhaus, 50, of Angola was archery hunting on private ground just northeast of Angola when he fell about 16 feet while climbing into his deer stand at around 5:30 p.m., according to Indiana Conservation Officer James Price.

How to keep your tree stand from killing you

http://www.delmarvanow.com/story/life/outdoors/2017/08/11/tree-stand-safety-inspection/560969001/

August is an odd month. It’s too hot to start most hunting chores, the actual hunting seasons are weeks away and even the fishing is stuck in the summer doldrums. Yet we’re so close, calendar-wise, to so many things that everyone is itching to start doing something. With the archery deer seasons being some of the first hunting in September one smart thing to do now is take care of those minor but important details on your tree stands.

Whether you use a climbing, hang-on, ladder or tripod stand while deer hunting, take this time to go over your stands and check for things like rusted metal, worn bolts and loose pins. Replace anything that looks questionable because it’s certain to break at the most critical time. With tree stands that will likely be when you’re 20 feet in the air, which is not the place you want an equipment malfunction.

Pay close attention to the strap that secures the stand to the tree. On many stands this is simply a heavy nylon belt and those have a tendency to wear and rot over the years. Look closely if your stand has a metal band or cable for the tree attachment, too, as even those can deteriorate over time. I use a climber for much of bow season and a few years ago I noticed the metal cable was beginning to show rust and corrosion. In the trash it went, replaced by a brand new cable from the factory. Don’t take any chances.

[Oh no–Not another one!] Massachusetts hunter dies in apparent fall from tree stand in Maine woods

Massachusetts hunter dies in apparent fall from tree stand in Maine woods

Thomas Pelletier, 62, was found by a hunting partner Thursday in a remote area northeast of Old Town.

A Massachusetts man died Thursday after falling from a tree stand while bear hunting about 40 miles northeast of Old Town, according to the Maine Warden Service.

Thomas Pelletier, 62, of Wareham, Massachusetts, had been hunting in a remote area north of Duck Lake.

The Warden Service said Pelletier was discovered around 7:45 p.m. by his hunting companion, 56-year-old Richard Rooks, also of Wareham, who had been hunting in a different area. Rooks found Pelletier unresponsive after an apparent fall and tried to revive him before seeking help.

Pelletier was pronounced dead by wardens and first responders from Lincoln Fire and Rescue, according to the Warden Service. The incident is still under investigation by wardens, who worked throughout the night with the Medical Examiner’s Office to document the incident and remove Pelletier from the woods.

Wardens say that falls from tree stands account for hundreds of injuries, including some deaths, annually in the U.S. and that hunters should carefully follow instructions for setting up stands and using full-body harnesses.

Hunting accident sidelines Bassmaster champ

Tree stand-related accidents are the No. 1 way hunters suffer injuries during hunting season.

        By              Ed Zieralski Jan. 27, 2014
A tree stand accident knocked Bassmaster Champion Cliff Pace out of this year's Bassmaster Classic.
                A tree stand accident knocked Bassmaster Champion Cliff Pace out of this year’s Bassmaster Classic.                                    
Those who think hunter safety only relates to not pointing any gun, loaded or unloaded, in an unsafe way don’t know the scope of being safe in the field or woods.

Take what happened to Cliff Pace as a prime example of how a hunt can go wrong and not have anything to do with a gun. Pace, of Petal, Miss., is the defending champion of the Bassmaster Classic. He was set to defend that title next month at Lake Guntersville near Birmingham, Ala., but an accident in a tree stand last Friday when he was bow hunting during the late deer season knocked Pace out of the Classic. He broke his leg in two places after slipping while getting out of his stand.

I learned long ago that most of tree stand accidents happen getting in or getting out of the tree. I also learned that if you have a tendency to doze off in the woods when waiting for deer, climbing up into a tree stand isn’t a good idea unless you have a very good safety strap and vest to lock you in.

These are common sense deals, as are most hunter safety issues such as not crossing a fence with a loaded gun, leaning a gun against a vehicle, shooting without clearly identifying a target and background and not keeping a safety on when walking or waiting. But sometimes common sense takes a back seat when a big buck or long-bearded tom approaches.

In California, hunters must take a safety class and then pass a test before getting a hunter safety certificate that is required to get a hunting license. With turkey hunting season two months away, now’s the time to get that hunter safety certificate so you can take advantage of the best season of the year – spring gobbler. …

full story: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/Jan/27/hunting-tree-stands-safety/

Other hunting accidents this month include:

Cullman Times Online  – ‎Jan 27, 2014‎
“This is just a tragic accident, and the young man who did the shooting, who was related to Tucker by marriage, was devastated,” Bartlett said.
WFN: World Fishing Network
U-T San Diego  – ‎Jan 27, 2014‎
Pace, of Petal, Miss., is the defending champion of the Bassmaster Classic. He was set to defend that title next month at Lake Guntersville near Birmingham, Ala.
wreg.com  – ‎Jan 29, 2014‎
But Tuesday, his cousin, 14-year old Trey Wilburn, was shot in a hunting accident. As he and another relative climbed into a deer stand, one of their guns went off, hitting Wilburn.
al.com  – ‎Jan 28, 2014‎
J. Wayne Fears, blaze orange, deer hunting.jpg View full sizeWhile hunting-related fatalities are rare taken in context to how many hours people put in the woods, one is too many considering they are all preventable.
wreg.com  – ‎Jan 28, 2014‎
Relatives say the 11-year-old and his 14-year-old brother went to hunt Tuesday morning in a wooded area behind their home, several miles east of the town of Como in Panola County.
Dallas Morning News
Dallas Morning News  – ‎Jan 20, 2014‎
ELDORADO – Texas singer and songwriter Steven Fromholz has died in a hunting accident when a rifle fell and discharged. The Schleicher County Sheriff’s Office on Monday said the accident happened at the Flying B Ranch near Eldorado, about 40 miles 
Martha’s Vineyard Times
Martha’s Vineyard Times  – ‎Jan 7, 2014‎
Monster shark tourney organizer dead in duck hunting accident. This 2010 photo shows Steve James, president of the Boston Big Game Fishing Club and.
The Northwest Florida Daily News
The Northwest Florida Daily News  – ‎Jan 6, 2014‎
Tolar is the third hunter in the past few months to be injured. Kirkland said a person was seriously injured after they fell from a tree stand during the fall while hunting and broke several vertebrae. A Milton man was killed in late November when he
New York Daily News
New York Daily News  – ‎Jan 13, 2014‎
An upstate prosecutor is moving to indict a Long Island man who shot and killed a pal in a November hunting accident, the Daily News has learned.
WBTW – Myrtle Beach and Florence SC  – ‎Jan 2, 2014‎
Byers said officials were notified at about 4:30 pm Wednesday, that a father had accidentally shot his 8-year-old son while the pair was deer hunting. Byers said the boy was struck by stray buckshot during the incident and had to undergo surgery
KKTV 11 News  – ‎Jan 5, 2014‎
The Telluride Daily Planet reports Trenten Tyler Sutherland was shot in the head while hunting coyotes with two companions the night of Dec. 27.
Holmes County Times Advertiser
WJHG-TV  – ‎Jan 21, 2014‎
VERNON The Vernon Community is getting behind teenager who accidentally shot herself in a hunting accident Sunday. Doctors in Pensacola had to amputate part of 16 year old Andrea Wright’s right leg.
WXIA-TV
Post Searchlight  – ‎Jan 8, 2014‎
Matthew Jernigan, 17, was recovered from the Chattahoochee River in Seminole County Tuesday afternoon after he fell into the water while duck hunting with two other teenagers earlier that morning. Jernigan, a junior at Southwest Georgia Academy, Payson 
al.com (blog)  – ‎Jan 4, 2014‎
SUMTER COUNTY, Alabama – A man from the Birmingham area was fatally shot in a hunting accident early Saturday, a Mississippi news station has reported.
CMT.com
CMT.com  – ‎Jan 21, 2014‎
Singer-Songwriter Steve Fromholz Dies at 68 in Hunting Accident. Texan’s Songs Were Recorded by Willie Nelson, Lyle Lovett, Others.
The Providence Journal
CBS Local  – ‎Jan 7, 2014‎
WESTPORT, Mass. (AP) _ Two duck hunters died and a third was rushed to a hospital Tuesday after they fell into the frigid waters of the Westport River when their boat capsized.
MyFoxAL  – ‎Jan 13, 2014‎
The county coroner’s office says 37-year-old Adam Scott Jordan died after another member of his three-person hunting group shot him.
WTVA  – ‎Jan 4, 2014‎
HOUSTON, Miss. (AP) – Authorities in Chickasaw County say a teenage boy was shot in the head when his hunting partner’s rifle accidentally fired.
Holmes County Times Advertiser
wmbb  – ‎Jan 20, 2014

Somebody Definitely Needs a New Heart

Normally I would feel sorry for a girl born with a rare heart disease that requires her to get both a heart and liver transplant. But when 11 year old Kaitlynn Bessette of Stetsonville, Wisconsin, shot a 335 pound black bear through the heart, she lost all my sympathy.

Why is it that when some people suffer adversity they feel the need to take it out on others? And what is going on in the mind of a pre-teenaged girl that makes her want to kill a magnificent animal like a bear anyway? How can a person who knows all too well what it’s like to be the target of undeserved misfortune say, “I felt thankful, like really thankful I shot a bear”? Are kids today reading or watching too many stories, such as “The Hunger Games,” where the heroin is a huntress? Or maybe they’re playing too many violent video games, like “Cabela’s Big Game Hunter 2012” (available for only $79.99 in Xbox or Wii).

Of course, Kaitlynn wasn’t out there on her own; she had the help of the Wisconsin-based “United Special Sportsman Alliance,” a hunting group that grants wishes for children (most of which no doubt involve killing animals). They must have lured the bear in with bait and had Kaitlynn safely stationed in a tree-stand close enough for an easy kill, since she wasn’t even looking when she pulled the trigger: “…I held the gun as steady as I could, I turned my head and then I shot.”

After learning that her daughter had killed a bear, her mother said, “I started instantly crying.” Crying would be an appropriate reaction to hearing that a bear’s life was just unnecessarily ended or learning that your youngster was a murderer, but Mrs. Bessette was crying tears of joy instead of sorrow, “…it was amazing.” Kaitlynn’s father was equally pleased with the carnage, “She’s a good kid. I’m really proud of her.”

The family plans to mount the bear’s remains on their wall to keep the memory alive. Had the child been satisfied with taking only a photograph of the animal, both the memory—and the bear—could live on.

Text and Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson