Sneaker
FNG
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2024
- Messages
- 78
I expend every effort to find wounded game, and if I can’t find it, I hunt on if it is legal and allowed.
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It’s the law in Canada to notch your tag even if you don’t recover the animal. From birds to big game.
If wounding and/or not recovering game is a regular occurrence, a person should really be stopping and thinking about what they may or may not be doing to cause it. If this is an event that is happening to you more than once or twice every few years (and that is probably being generous), I'd wager you're making some decisions that YOU can alter that can prevent it from happening in the first place. At that point, I think your priorities are a little messed up if your concern is "How many is too many?".I’ve seen some folks mentioning wounding an animal….not recovering the animal. Then continuing to hunt. My question is how many do you have to wound before you stop ?
You must be from BC, speaking on behalf of Rokslide like you're the centre of the universe. Lol.You must be from Ontario, speaking on behalf of the whole country like you’re in the centre of the universe lol.
The only province the guys on this forum really want to hunt is BC, and in BC you’d be BREAKING the law if you cut a tag and didn’t possess the animal.
Good point. Deciding whether to pull the trigger or wait for a better shot opportunity is a more important ethical decision in my opinion.If wounding and/or not recovering game is a regular occurrence, a person should really be stopping and thinking about what they may or may not be doing to cause it.
We’re all human. We all make mistakes. Bullets can fail. A stick that we didn’t see is in the way, we misjudged distance. Maybe we rushed a shot we shouldn’t have. Many things can contribute to a wounded and/or unrecovered animal. Some of them are preventable, some are not. However, if you’re regularly wounding critters and not making changes, then any “ethics” discussion is null and void. At that point you’re demonstrating that you don’t actually care about the animal.Good point. Deciding whether to pull the trigger or wait for a better shot opportunity is a more important ethical decision in my opinion.