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Mike Williams
Walnut Creek, CA
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Judged:
1
I would suggest that the majority of folks with graduate or doctoral degrees don't find joy in killing animals.
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Raymond
Brisbane, Australia
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im from Australia QLD. lets just say both gun and bow got a 100% perfect lung shot on a deer. which methode is better to kill. a kinda small bullet or a bigger arrow tip.? i would like to know. cos in my eyes. if your a good hunter. u wont shoot till u have a perfect shot. so it comes down to whitch one works best. AKA for pain, quickest death.???
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Michelle Advey
Cleveland, OH
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Chardon Township- Two women who believe killing deer with bows and arrows is too cruel have offered to hire sharpshooters with rifles to thin herds in the Geauga County Park District.
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Dana Balderree
Lake Jackson, TX
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left of right wrote: I hunt to eat good "organic" meat (depending how close farmland is) and have been considering bow hunting, but now I think I might stick to a rifle unless hard times hit. Sitting and waiting 40 minutes for a large mammal to die from a good shot just seems excessive and unnecessary compared to a good rifle shot. I love practicing archery, but any living creature would certainly appreciate the quicker death. I agree, I am an avid hunter that also likes the outdoors and good venison. I realize populations must be controlled, but should be done ethically. I try to practice precise RIFLE shooting as often as possible to ensure instant kills. Anything less is unacceptable and therefore unethical.
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Dana Balderree
Lake Jackson, TX
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Michelle Advey wrote: Chardon Township- Two women who believe killing deer with bows and arrows is too cruel have offered to hire sharpshooters with rifles to thin herds in the Geauga County Park District. Great! Ethical solution, & donate meat to the needy.
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“I'm a humane bowhunter”
Since: Apr 08
Location hidden
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Please wait...
Mike Williams wrote: I would suggest that the majority of folks with graduate or doctoral degrees don't find joy in killing animals. Put a lot of thought in to that comment did ya? Somewhere around 5-6% of the population hunts. Why would you think the numbers for folks with graduate or doctoral degrees would be different? On a personal note, most of the dr's in my family hunt or hunted. I'm talking about several of them. Do you believe hunting is about finding joy in killing?
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