B_2015_04_05_

(C. Jardin) #1

8 >BOWHUNTER APRIL/MAY 2015


Reader Disagrees
With Using Hounds
Dear Bowhunter,
I am a seasoned, devout hunter with
both gun and bow, and I believe in the
fair-chase hunt.  I am also a longtime
Bowhunter subscriber, and I enjoy most
of the articles in your magazine. Howev-
er, I take issue with the January/February
2015 article, “One Cool Cat,” by Associ-
ate Publisher Danny Farris.  While I’m
sure bowhunting mountain lions is an
adventure, I personally don’t see the sport
in chasing a mountain lion over hill and
dale with a pack of dogs until the cat even-
tually runs up a tree, at which point the
hunter walks up to the tree and shoots the
animal, which is already scared to death
from being pursued by both the hounds
and the hunter. Ten have an entire fam-
ily pose all smiles with the cat as if they
had really done something special. I don’t
consider taking a treed animal a fair-
chase hunt, nor do I call it an honorable
way to hunt an animal as magnifcent as
a mountain lion.  Te animal is basically
cornered in a tree, with no place to go to
get away from its pursuers.  If that’s the
way that mountain lion hunting is tradi-
tionally done, then I for one have no de-
sire to ever partake in using hounds to try
and kill one. Te method is akin to high-
fence hunting in a confned area, where
the animal has no chance of escape and
basically no place to go. And, in the name
of fair-chase hunting, I believe hound
hunting for mountain lions should be
outlawed. Rob W., via e-mail

Editor’s note: Your letter has lit a fuse on both
Danny and Traditional Editor Fred Eichler,
who happens to be the outftter that hosted
Danny’s hunt. Since we deem this to be a sig-
nifcant point of contention, we are allowing
both to respond.

Danny Farris responds: The conservation
blueprint used in this country has been tremen-
dously successful, and part of that blueprint
includes proportionately managing predator
and prey populations as prescribed by scientifc
study. In much of the West, mountain lions are
the number-one predator of deer, elk and big-
horn sheep, with estimated predation rates of
up to one animal per week, per lion! Without
the use of hounds, managing lion populations
would be impossible. If the only viable means

of management were eliminated, lion numbers
would rise and game populations would fall.
One need only look at the wolf debacle for evi-
dence of the disaster that could result.
From a sporting perspective, your high-fence
analogy is unfounded. Not every lion track re-
sults in a cat up a tree. Many a lion hunter has
paid for multiple hunts before actually tagging
a cat, if at all. As in all hunting, the sport is in
the overall experience, not just the kill. Finally,
I would ask, as a “ devout hunter with both gun
and bow,” do you actually consider placing your
crosshairs on an unsuspecting animal, from
several hundred yards away, and then squeez-
ing the trigger somehow more sporting than my
taking my frst mountain lion with a recurve
bow? If you still answer yes, I suggest you spend
some time on a treadmill, book a lion hunt, and
see if your perspective doesn’t change.

Fred Eichler responds: You have no experi-
ence, so I don’t fault you for being unaware of
the challenges a lion hunt poses. It is a physi-
cally demanding hunt for all involved, and
despite your perception, the cat always has a
chance to escape. It is a long, long way from
the high-fence hunt you suggest.
You also might not realize that 95 percent
of all lion population management is achieved
through the use of hounds. Tis is because it is
the only method for achieving any measur-
able and necessary harvest of lions. Te cat in
Danny’s article had actually killed an elk on
my property, about a half-mile from where I
live with my wife and three sons, which brings
up the most ofensive part of your letter. I take
particular exception to your comment about
including family members in our hunt. How
you can disparage a fellow hunter for that is
beyond me.
I assume you are aware that millions of
hunters use dogs to harvest pheasants, quail,
ducks, squirrels, raccoons, coyotes, bobcats,
hogs and bears, to name just a few. Would
you prefer to see these pursuits outlawed as
well? In most Western states, using hounds
is a common, legal method for managing lion
populations. As much as you “take issue” with
it, I also take issue with any hunter who con-
demns others for their chosen legal method. If
we hunters continue to challenge and criticize
each other, it will contribute to our downfall.
Instead, our energies should be spent working
to preserve hunting for future generations. ❮❮❮

Between Bowhunters
LETTERS FROM READERS

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