RocketRob16
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2023
- Messages
- 147
Gotta give props to OP for using this as a learning opportunity and considering all the feedback. Not easy to do sometimes.
OMG... looking at those pictures? That's a TOTAL d~~k move. That "hill" isn't even hard to negotiate! Steep, meh a lil, but No "endless buckthorn" even. Dude could have AT LEAST hiked like 600-1000yds along the top of the ridge you were sitting at, and THEN descended down... potentially pushing something your way perhaps. I'd imagine THAT could be a gentlemanly thing to do, yes?Especially when there are multiple other routes to get to the vehicle that wouldn’t interfere with my hunting at all.
Brother? WE just don't know any better, at least not at first anyway. Thankfully there are these forums.I don't believe 99% of these guys are people that grew up hunting, it is these adult onset hunters that don't give a shit and/or have no respect for hunting/hunters as a whole.
That’s all good what you say there but look at the photo. It’sa grassy parkland and the guy could walk other ways. And he’s quitting early. Original post doesn’t describe whether he’s injured or distressed. I’m curious.I mean... would I do exactly what he did? No. But was it public land? Yes? This might be an unpopular opinion but there's no "dibs" there. Getting there earlier doesn't grant more of a right to glass or hunt it. I've had plenty of hunters walk very close to where I was on their way to who-knows-where and I wouldn't personally "mark off" some random half-mile of land in my mind just because I saw another guy standing on a ridge looking at it.
That guy was awful close to you. But to look at another viewpoint, I'll regularly walk up to other hunters if I find them in the field. I consider it a courtesy - I'm very quiet, and getting close lets me have a brief chat about what they're up to without the sound carrying to any game. I usually ask what direction they're focusing on, and if they're staying put (glassing/sitting) or moving (which way?). I make a point of exiting the area in a direction totally away from their goal. But I consider that me being polite - a kindness, not an obligation.
Then again, I hunt very pressured areas. Running into other folks is common and plenty of folks I talk to will very openly share what they've seen, what they're after, and whether that pond I'm headed towards still has water or not. Despite the stories on forums like this, very few lie - I've always found these brief encounters to be helpful more often than not. Maybe he was hoping he would, too. You never know...
And he’s quitting early
It is the guys who didnt grow up hunting.It is fully out of control at this point,
I don't believe 99% of these guys are people that grew up hunting, it is these adult onset hunters that don't give a shit and/or have no respect for hunting/hunters as a whole.
Once again I completely agree with “it’s public land what can you do” but yeah that guy is traversing the area around twilight so that maybe he’s not quitting early if it’s his 8th day but it definitely makes it a little worse. Is it you?Is he?
Once again I completely agree with “it’s public land what can you do” but yeah that guy is traversing the area around twilight so that maybe he’s not quitting early if it’s his 8th day but it definitely makes it a little worse. Is it you?
We often tolerate behavior among friends and family that would drive us nuts from a stranger. And we all know "that guy", don't we? The guy that does the thing that if he was a stranger, he'd be swimming back to shore, but if he's your friend, it's just "goddammit Steve..."I’m sure it was already mentioned, but I definitely grew up in the “there’s our group, and then there’s those assholes over there”, whether it was fishing or hunting.