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Thread: Maybe need to start shooting everything we see in some areas

  1. #1
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    Maybe need to start shooting everything we see in some areas

    http://www.stuff.co.nz/environment/1...id=app-android
    So given a couple of big assumptions, first that the situation is as described, 2nd that many hunters choose to pass on shots to find a better specimen- whether meat, rack or doe without fawn. Or meat bag already full.

    It doesn't take much imagination to see a F&B media campaign ending in some form of mass extinction attempt.

    So the question arises, what actually is the role of the hunting community in effectively controlling the numbers of animals we hunt ? If it's left to govt forces its likely some future generation will be reduced to shooting paper targets only.
    WillB and outlander like this.
    I know a lot but it seems less every day...

    Due to the exorbitant cost of reloading components, warning shots will not be given.

  2. #2
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    I looked but didnt see phone number for access.......also interesting the deer were videoed and not shot....
    fifty quid to knob of goat shit anyone trying to access that property of surrounding land will be turned down as a dirty "cunter"...... Miss Chen, thats almost your back yard,maybe you should track them down and see if access is forth coming...
    veitnamcam, tetawa, scotty and 6 others like this.

  3. #3
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    The'd need to change the stigma that follows hunters, and maybe incentivise hunters for taking a few extra animals. Get more ammo shipped and reduce the cost, 20 bucks a tail, allow more effective gear to take more shots.
    scotty and keengunNic like this.

  4. #4
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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  5. #5
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    Starting to take this mindset up around the ruahines, (private and public land) taking more and giving more and more away to friends and family. My parents get a kick out of emptying the freezer and saying "weve given it away, we need more venison" im not fussed so long as its not the stuff from the butcher. Butcher costs money

  6. #6
    Member HNTMAD's Avatar
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    Well I have been doing my bit on public and private, there are far too many around, ruahines needs a clean up as does the Haurangi and private, well yeah they do too....one farm I go on has cullers in once a month and I still go out and see 20 plus without looking and shoot 1 to 4 at a time....

    Happy conservation team

    Hamish

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    199p, tikka, stingray and 13 others like this.
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  7. #7
    Member scotty's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Micky Duck View Post
    I looked but didnt see phone number for access.......also interesting the deer were videoed and not shot....
    fifty quid to knob of goat shit anyone trying to access that property of surrounding land will be turned down as a dirty "cunter"...... Miss Chen, thats almost your back yard,maybe you should track them down and see if access is forth coming...
    yea you would think if the word was put out there , there would be plenty of meat hunters willing and able to bring the numbers down.....was thinking if he balloted out weekends on the bushline he could recoup some $ ....but then worksafe and council compliance issues would probably be a pain in the arse for him....

    i guess as posted earlier if the govt incentivised meathunting more would be out smashing it...

  8. #8
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    Are you guys allowed to hunt using a semi-auto shotty with slugs?

    One with a 8 shot tube and red dot would be my pick for short range, high density deer/goat culls.
    sgteval likes this.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by caberslash View Post
    Are you guys allowed to hunt using a semi-auto shotty with slugs?

    One with a 8 shot tube and red dot would be my pick for short range, high density deer/goat culls.
    Yes, but not on public land, and semi (and pump) shotguns with mag capacity over 5 are prohibited.
    Micky Duck and caberslash like this.

  10. #10
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    I may be a little naive here but someone a little while back, on a different thread, suggested that if a significant number of us joined Forest and Bird then we would have voting rights and therefore a say in how things transpire. It doesn't have to be an "us and them" situation so that we can save the trees and still hunt. I stand to be corrected on this but to me it seems logical. It does however require a large number of deerstalkers joining F and B. Change things from the inside !! The $57 annual membership is a small price to pay.
    199p, sgteval, tikka and 8 others like this.
    If you have a garden and a library, you have all you need. Oh, and a dog, and a rifle

  11. #11
    Member Nathan F's Avatar
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    Stop waiting for stuff to give you phone numbers or hand out written invitations for access. Door knocking has always been irked for me in the past. Doc land is crawling with deer also. Shoot them. The good times are here now.
    ebf, bunji, HNTMAD and 6 others like this.

  12. #12
    By Popular Demand gimp's Avatar
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    There is no maybe about it. We need to be shooting more hinds. It may already be too late to make a difference. Learn from History - 1860s deer introduced; over subsequent decades expand in range and numbers; acclimatisation societies realise numbers are a problem by the 1920s and attempt limited culling by recreational hunters; by 1931 Govt has declared all-out war on deer. We are in a similar cycle. Deer populations recovered from the lows of the 1980s and 1990s caused by high pressure from helicopter and ground based commercial hunting. There is no point disputing this, if you wish to do so: the argument has passed you by and you are talking to yourself. The discussion now is about what part recreational hunters have in managing wild animals into the future, not whether or not it needs to happen.

    The common narrative is that recreational hunters can't control deer numbers. This is not necessarily true, it's more correct to say that the management agencies through the last 100 years have never tried to effectively utilise recreational hunters as a management tool. It's not likely that the current agency will either, but if we don't independently take the initiative as recreational hunters to actively manage populations by killing more females, we will lose the social license to have populations at all. The risk of wholesale paradigm change around wild animals in NZ is real. If we can't demonstrate that we can sustainably manage our wild animals society will likely begin to consider eradicating them. And this may not be possible but it's certainly possible to reduce numbers to the point where we cannot hunt them with any expectation of success. The political pressure is a real risk to us, and we are a small minority of Nz. The urban majority buy into the narrative of introduced wild animals as deleterious pests - we should never use this term.



    Short of an exponential increase in the WARO market(unlikely - it's a sad dead industry circling the drain, and hasn't been effective in managing wild animals for the past 20 years except to a limited degree locally), deer numbers in NZ are not going to decrease on their own. Either we work out collectively as hunters that we need to sustainably manage populations and habitat - and landowners need to work this out too - or the urban majority of the population will vote on the side of preserving our native flora biodiversity and we'll lose any say in the matter.

    You may scoff and say eradication will never happen or is impossible. Currently poisons are not used or registered for use for controlling ungulates in Nz (no, 1080 is not used for this - anyone who thinks it is, is simply factually incorrect). Political pressure in future could conceivably change this - which would rapidly change the landscape of deer management. Technology is moving fast, thermal technology substantially improves hunter efficacy. It is foolish to hope the problem goes away.
    Nathan F, Trout, Makros and 13 others like this.

  13. #13
    Member outdoorlad's Avatar
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    It was encouraging to see DOC trailing some hunter Access into the Nelson Lakes NP for the purpose of reducing numbers, a few other regions should take a look at this, opening access up during March/April would be good.

    Time to load some more ammo.
    Shut up, get out & start pushing!

  14. #14
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    Counted 40 one morning last week when packrafting down a West Coast river.

  15. #15
    Member mopheadrob's Avatar
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    Yep, numbers are high alright. While I’d love to agree that recreational hunters should be able to have an impact, there’s just too much back country that is bloody hard to get to. Why hike for days into an area when you can easily shoot a couple of meat animals in the front country? As @outdoorlad says, we need to get creative with access.
    Danny and BSA270 like this.

 

 

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