Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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Hunting and Conservation

As hunting declines, so do conservation funds.

I have told and told and told people, when animals cease to be useful to humans, they cease to exist.  Humans protect what they want.  If they want ducks and deer, they will set aside habitat for them.  Hunters get out and see the environment, see it changing -- they notice if things are wrong.  People in cities go from house to car to building and may never bother to visit a park.  They don't see it.  Hunters know the weather's changing because they are out  in it and the game timing is changing too.  Most other people don't.  What they don't see, they don't love; what they don't love, they don't protect.

Well, here it is: as people hunt less, they become disconnected more, and support wildlife less.  They are not, for instance, transferring funds once spent on hunting to some other wildlife fund.  Maybe they're spending it on video games or veganmeat, but the point is, they're no longer spending it on wildlife.  That is a big problem.  The government is spending less on conservation at a time when we need to spend much more.  And with the threats to the food supply from climate change, we damn well better  know how to hunt and forage if we want to eat.  Or it'll be like that TV show where people risked death to raid for canned goods when there were dandelions and rabbits as far as the eye could see.
Tags: economics, nature, news, safety, wildlife
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  • 6 comments
We have wild turkey in this area that have never been hunted. They will feed beside roads in plain view of humans.
Crows too.
:^)
That's awesome. Turkeys are the most dominant birds around feeders. I would've predicted a raptor, but no: turkeys. Size does matter.
Turkeys, while not being dedicated raptors, definitely love catching and eating mice, voles, and any other small rodent they can catch and swallow whole.
There was one orchardist who related seeing the joy with which his tame turkey flock chased down voles out in his orchard.
Youtube has several video's of chickens chasing, catching, and eating mice as well.
:^)

Fascinating! I knew that about chickens, but not about turkeys. It makes sense given that turkeys are much bigger. :D

I imagine this explains why pastured turkeys are so delicious.
I imagine that's why pastured anything tastes so much better.
The animal eats properly rather than what some food scientist thinks they aught to eat.
AS WELL AS gets enough exercise.
:^)
Hence why Comte is the best cheese in the world: you can taste the pastures it came from. <3