GAHunterJim
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2022
- Messages
- 257
Recently, I was at an dinner meeting with a new perspective faculty member, she was from the middle east and remarked that Americans were quite unusual when it came to dangerous animals and conservation. It was her observation around much of the world that dangerous animals were controlled and removed so humans can be safe. Here in the US, we protect and often reintroduce alligators (we are in FL and that's how the conversation started), wolves and grizzlies.
Our conservation history got off to a rough start (buffalo come to mind) but we eventually got on the right track restoring native wildlife where we could, often times in direct conflict with other human interest (thinking wolves and ranchers).
The expanding grizzly populations between Yellowstone and Glacier are a huge success story and they should be conserved just like other wildlife and game animals (thinking deer, elk, black bear, etc.).
IMHO, the only way humans and grizzlies will coexist if they are hunted with a plan in place to maintain a level determined with land capacity and reasonable interaction with humans. The situation has simply gotten out of control and needs to be addressed.
I spearfish in FL and encounter sharks often, it's a choice I make and don't call for killing sharks because they are dangerous. People can generally avoid the water, they can't avoid the land. Some may say 'well, don't hunt, fish, hike, jog or otherwise recreate in grizzly country but that's just realistic). Decades ago it was quite easy to avoid Grizzlies outdoors as their territory was limited, now they are every expanding into areas that were once safe.
It's easy to be an arm-chair quarterback in the safety of your recliner when you're not the one getting sacked and mauled, killed or disfigured for life!
Our conservation history got off to a rough start (buffalo come to mind) but we eventually got on the right track restoring native wildlife where we could, often times in direct conflict with other human interest (thinking wolves and ranchers).
The expanding grizzly populations between Yellowstone and Glacier are a huge success story and they should be conserved just like other wildlife and game animals (thinking deer, elk, black bear, etc.).
IMHO, the only way humans and grizzlies will coexist if they are hunted with a plan in place to maintain a level determined with land capacity and reasonable interaction with humans. The situation has simply gotten out of control and needs to be addressed.
I spearfish in FL and encounter sharks often, it's a choice I make and don't call for killing sharks because they are dangerous. People can generally avoid the water, they can't avoid the land. Some may say 'well, don't hunt, fish, hike, jog or otherwise recreate in grizzly country but that's just realistic). Decades ago it was quite easy to avoid Grizzlies outdoors as their territory was limited, now they are every expanding into areas that were once safe.
It's easy to be an arm-chair quarterback in the safety of your recliner when you're not the one getting sacked and mauled, killed or disfigured for life!