Nope…. I HATE it.Am I the only one bothered when hunters say they "harvested" an animal?
We aren't farmers. We are hunters. We kill the animal and harvest the meat. Why are we so afraid to say the word kill?
Nope…. I HATE it.Am I the only one bothered when hunters say they "harvested" an animal?
We aren't farmers. We are hunters. We kill the animal and harvest the meat. Why are we so afraid to say the word kill?
Nope…. I HATE it.
Do you also not like the trapper term Dispatch?I also eat most animals that I kill other than some predators and vermin.
I appreciate all the points of view that have been posted on this.
Maybe I don't care for the term because I feel it makes light of the fact or ignores the fact that we are indeed killing.
I dont love it, it feels forced to say it sometimes, but I do depending on the audience. I also think a few hunters are overly callous and like to rub it in peoples faces, which bugs me just as much. I really have no issue with couching something in terms that allow the people I’m speaking with to see past something they are uncomfortable with, in order to see a bigger picture. Other times I dont worry about it. Its like speaking a foreign language—it’ll never feel perfectly comfortable to me, it’s not “home”, but I still think there’s value in speaking someone else’s language sometimes.
In any case, there is such a movement/industry around growing whitetail deer with strategically-manage properties, food olots, planned bedding areas, etc, that I think there is some argument to “harvest” being reasonably accurate in situations like that.
We’ve turned into a nation of betas, can’t afford to hurt any feelings
Maybe my family, friends and I are all 'fudds', but we always have used "got".
Did you get anything today? Yeah, got a great buck or a nice-sized doe.
Got that buck I have been after all year.
It's never been either harvested or killed.
I am with the OP on this one. It’s annoyed me ever since it started becoming popular. I’ve always felt like a person using “harvest” is trying to distance themselves from the truth that they killed an animal during the process of hunting/fishing. It feels disrespectful to the animal to work super hard to kill it, be happy about that success and then in certain social situations you act ashamed by the fact you did it. I think the use of the term resulted from people feeling bashful or ashamed by hunting or the discussion of it under less permissive social environments.
Secondly, I have never liked people using words like “passed away” or “lost” when discussing a person dying. They are not lost, they f’n died. JUST SAY IT.
Hmm I don't know that quote seems pretty historical. I agree though the posed up pictures have always seemed pretty goofy to me.
For the original topic, I think harvest is 100% accurate, Webster's says so! I probably say both depending on audience and haven't given it much thought
"Killing" sounds so 2024 and "Harvest" sounds like an '80s hard rock band.
Here is what I would say if bragging about your hunting success.
I successfully performed a fragmentary extirpation of selected quadruped mammalian specimens based on conditional published terms and rules of engagement established to help maintain and secure a robust base providing for sufficient future panmictic activity...
All good. Didn't see the need to debate online is why I deleted. No personal opinions on you, you Internet hero ha. I do think you're full of shit but let me researchThe juice is worth the squeeze imo. Don’t care what you think of me, look into it. A lack of curiosity, investigation, give a shit is solely on you. European hunting customs.
The (deleted?) post you made that came to my email suggesting I’m an Internet Hero, lol, I’m just a Lil’ Rokslider.
I don't think there's anything misleading about that term. Doesn't bother me a bit.Do you also not like the trapper term Dispatch?
I believe that’s been used for decades.