Heffay wrote:JJ wrote:Heffay wrote:Or, you can let nature take its course. Live and let live. The predators won't outgrow their food source.
Piss on that. If we just let nature have it's way, there would be no pheasants anyways.
On our hunting lands, feral cats, coons, skunks, and possums are shoot on sight. Whenever we are down at the farm, there are traps in culverts and around the farmsteads.
It's not just about protecting game animals. it's also about preventing our dogs from getting tied up with any of the above. Vet bills are expensive.
Someone once posted on this forum a scientific article that showed shooting the pests does nothing to reduce their populations. If you want to actually affect them, you have to actively trap.
I guess if it makes you *feel* better when you shoot them, go ahead. I'm going to live by the rule "you eat what you kill."
The topic animal of the teapping vs shooting was specifically coyotes. And how does 'nature' take its course in the agricultural areas of MN where pheasants are not indigenous, but rather Asian imports.
Like it or not, every critter on earth is managed to one end or another, frequently by those with conflicting interests, and goals.
ETA:
'm going to live by the rule "you eat what you kill."[
Really? How do you prepare wood ticks, mice, mosquitoes?