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Why Hunt? |
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Why
hunt? Modern hunters seem to find they are answering that question frequently. Sometimes the question is put by the genuinely curious; sometimes it is a hostile demand for justification. In the first case, the answer is complex and thought provoking. In the second, the answer is simple – “because it suits me to do so.” Hunting in and of itself requires no justification. The hunt is not only natural and healthful; it’s an inextricable part of our heritage as human beings. |
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Man
is and has long been a terminal predator, as marvelously equipped for
hunting by our intellect as a lion is by his claws and fangs, as a wolf by
his swift legs and pack instinct. No
matter whether humans today hunt directly, or employ middlemen to prepare
their prey for them on farms and meat packing plants, the fact of our
status as predator is in our very DNA.
We owe the very fact of our world-conquering intellect on the hunt,
on the stimulus that drove us to overcome the handicap of our clawless,
blunt-toothed bodies, to develop weapons to match the feats of the
greatest of animal predators; we owe our great brains to the access to
high-quality diets of meat, marrow, and fat that predatory behavior
allowed. But,
the question remains nonetheless. Why,
now, do we hunt? Some
hunt for the meat. A good
reason in itself; game meat is lean, healthy, and free from additives; the
process of obtaining it provides exercise and time in the outdoors, away
from work pressures and the temptations of couches and televisions.
The fruits of the hunt, properly cared for, are welcomed on the
most discriminating of tables. Some
hunt for the camaraderie, another fine reason; for many of these, the
actual hunt is secondary to the outing with friends, sharing the campfire
with others of like mind and feeling.
Another good reason; it is in the enjoyment of fine companions that
we grow as social animals. The
annual ritual of the mountain elk camp is a vital part of the year for
many. But,
there is frequently another reason. A
reason that’s more compelling, and at the same time harder to explain. Henry
David Thoreau, in the great classic Walden, wrote “Go fish and
hunt far and wide day by day -- farther and wider -- and rest thee by many
brooks and hearth-sides without misgiving.
Remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth.
Rise free from care before the dawn, and seek adventures.
Let the noon find thee by other lakes, and the night overtake thee
everywhere at home. There are
no larger fields than these, no worthier games than may here be played.”
Thoreau spoke for many hunters in those words, hunters who hunt not
solely for the meat, or for the company, but for the ageless, timeless
experience of the hunt itself. For
it’s true that for some of us the hunt is an answer in itself.
It’s enough to awake hours before the dawn, and to know the utter
silence of a late autumn morning. To
hear the crunch of snow under your boots as you begin the hike into the
distant, silent mountains. To
smell the pines along the trail, and see the silent sentinel spruces on
the ridges, barely glimpsed in the pre-dawn dark.
It’s enough to sit, shivering, at that best spot on the top rim
of a remote basin, watching the east grow bright, waiting for the first
rays of warm sunshine to break though the trees and drive away the bitter
cold of night. But
those moments, treasured as they are, pale before the ultimate goal of the
hunt. It’s a part of the
hunter’s soul, to carry the knowledge that somewhere, out among the
pines, in the dark timber or the frost-covered meadows, a bull awaits, and
the chance of the day may bring him within your awareness.
The snap of a branch, the ghosting shape of antlers through the
aspens, the sudden ringing bugle of a bull elk, as he appears, suddenly,
where no bull was a moment before.
His breath plumes out in the cold as he screams his challenge, and
your hands and will freeze momentarily in awe of his magnificence.
It’s
enough to know that the day may bring the chance of a stalk, through the
darkness under the trees, along the edges of the golden grasses of a
meadow, creeping, creeping, under the streamside willows, silently,
slowly, ever closer, testing the wind, watching underfoot for twigs,
whispering a silent prayer to the forests and fields to allow you to close
the gap, to make the shot. With
luck, you’ll raise your rifle or draw your bow, and make your shot.
More often than not, though, the bull escapes, to play the game of
predator and prey another day, in another valley. You
can’t buy moments like that; you can’t find them on the Internet, or
at the movie theatre. When
the alarm rings in the icy cold of a pre-dawn tent at 9,000 feet, this
type of hunter doesn’t groan at the prospect of climbing out of the warm
sleeping bag; instead, the prospects of the day are enough incentive to
brave the cold, to pull on wool and leather, to step into the pitch-black
outdoors, under ice-chip stars. It is with pleasure and anticipation that this hunter begins
a day that will likely end back at the same tent, in the freezing dark,
hours after sunset, at the end of a long hike out of the wild. For
hunting requires a level of participation unknown in any other human
venture – hunting requires a communion with the very primal forces of
Nature, taking life so that life may be.
Hunting requires a contact that the non-hunter can never know, a
contact with life itself. The
hunter eschews supporting his or her life through a middleman; knowing the
cost of one’s diet, engenders respect for the lives that must be taken
to sustain one’s own life. Early
hunters knew this very well, as they revered their primary prey.
For example, Plains Indians referred to the bison as “uncle”
and “brother.” Paleolithic
cave drawings of game animals and hunt scenes are rendered with a loving
reverence that is still evident today, thousands of years later.
Modern hunters are much the same.
Enter a hunter’s home, and you’ll likely find framed prints of
deer and elk, waterfowl sculptures, photography of upland birds.
To
some it seems contradictory; to express respect, reverence, even love for
an animal that you pursue, hunt, kill, and eat.
It’s true that this seeming contradiction is as hard for hunters
to explain as it is for non-hunters to understand. Perhaps
the answer lies in the very understanding of our role in Nature.
Nature has but one law; Life feeds on Life, and Life gives Life to
Life. People who obtain their
steaks, chicken, and burgers from supermarkets and butcher’s shops can
lose sight of this fundamental truth, and perhaps they would prefer to
have that process sanitized in just such a manner.
In our modern, urbanized society, many like to imagine their own
existence is bloodless, clean, and sanitary.
But such an outlook is self-deluding.
The
hunter knows very well the cost for the steaks that grace his plate.
A year has been spent in preparation for the hunt, planning, caring
for equipment, and practicing marksmanship.
Without complaint or reservation, the hunter has arisen before
dawn, as described above, and walked the many miles to where the game
awaits. In the bright sun of
a meadow, in the twilight of dusk, or in the shadows of the forest he has
made the stalk, taken the shot with painstaking care, and dressed the
animal. He has packed out
quarters of elk, perhaps a two or three-day process, often through rough,
grueling country. The hunter
has cared for hides and antler and meat, and the price for the meal of elk
steak is ever with the one for whose life the elk’s life has given way. Most
of all, the hunter has seen the sudden transition from a living animal to
an inanimate food source, from animate life to meat for the table.
The non-hunting urbanite likely has never seen this take place, and
would not care to do so; but the hunter knows, with bittersweet
regularity, the price that must be paid for continued existence. It
is for this very reason that the hunter reveres his prey.
The intimate, timeless knowledge that Life springs from Life can
only lead to reverence for the source of that Life.
The bull elk in the dark timber, ghosting through the trees
silently as smoke, will live on in the blood, bone and sinew of the hunter
waiting on the ridge above; and the hunter, in his turn, will return to
the Earth, to nourish the soil, to give rise to the grasses that will feed
the elk. And how can the
hunter not revere the greathearted bull, revere the magnificence of the
great deer that will go to feed the hunter’s family in the winter to
come? Reverence for the game, reverence for the wellspring of life,
reverence for the great, largely unknowable cycles of the Earth, all come
from the intimacy with Nature found in the hunt. Hunting
is indeed what makes us human; hunting is what led humans to cooperate, to
plan, to anticipate, to form society.
The first great turning point in Mankind’s development was when
two unrelated families found they could hunt large animals by working
together, and so be more efficient at obtaining high-quality food; thus
was the first tribe born. Hunting has made us what we are. It’s
unfortunate that the non-hunter often cannot see past the fact that the
hunt results in the death of an animal.
The death of an animal, it’s true, is the goal of the hunt; but a
greater goal is to be found in the overall experience, of which the actual
kill is only the climactic moment. The
hunter’s soul often thrills as much, if not more, to the blown stalk,
the bull that senses something amiss and vanishes into the mountains like
a puff of smoke on the breeze, leaving no trace in his wake.
Fond memories include the grouse that explodes from underfoot at
the worst possible moment, the squirrel that set up a warning chatter in
the penultimate seconds of a carefully planned approach.
The vista of a great gulch viewed from the rim, with a herd of elk
grazing peacefully, undisturbed, and totally unapproachable on the far
side. And, indeed, in the
final moment of success, when the hunter approaches, cautiously, the
downed bull, lying still now against the bed of needles; the
heart-pounding thrill of success, weighted against the bittersweet regret
of the necessity of taking the life, facing the final truth that for life
to be, another life must give way. Life
feeds on Life, and Life gives Life to Life.
The hunter in success understands this great truth as no other
human possibly can. Why
hunt? We
hunt to pay homage to Nature, to Life, to the Earth.
To make our annual pilgrimage to our beginnings, to lay hands on
our heritage as members of the biotic community.
To affirm once more that Life feeds on Life, and Life gives Life to
Life. We hunt for the gift of
an elk to a family, the gift of life from the Earth.
In the hunt lies an affirmation, a recognition that we too will one
day return to the Earth that has fed and nurtured us, and the elk will
then feed on the minerals and nutrients returned to the soil from our
bodies. That affirmation alone is enough for many of us who hunt, to
send us once more out of our tents, trailers, and ranch houses, out into
the freezing darkness under the glittering stars, to climb an unseen
mountain for the chance at an elk. Hunting
has a fundamental truth that few non-hunters understand. It’s
not about death. It’s about
life. That’s why. |
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