Good point! non-hunters are the folks I am referring to. I guess I am just drawing from this experience I have had lately where people who are passively non-hunters completely change their tone when I describe and show them pictures from my backcountry bow hunts. I also talk about what great shape it gets me in, helps me reset in other areas of my life, and provides great interaction away from traffic and cell phones. I have taken a few folks with me on scouting trips and they all seem to discover a curiosity for hunting animals as well as an appreciation for how I have chosen to go about it.
QUESTION
If non-hunters are a valuable asset, which do you think they will be generally more supportive of?
1) Backcountry bowhunting, tough terrain, no ATV's, packing out your own animals, etc....
2) Glassing from the car with your .30-06 in a pair of blue jeans, taking an animal no more than a few hundred yards from a cozy cabin
I think there is a stereotype that people who hunt in general are simple minded guys looking to take the laziest route to kill an animal 200 yards away, sometime for meat, and sometimes just for fun.
I personally think if you want to have hunting appeal to a larger modern audience, it needs to be shown as an extremely difficult and educated process.
thoughts?