Whitetail Deer Hunting, the Pros and Cons Exposed

by wnydeerhunter on November 11, 2010

I’ve heard the grumblings of both sides of the fence for years now. The animal rights folks claim the “slaughter of innocent majestic animals” is barbaric. The radical anti-firearm folks who, far too often use hunting as a forum to grandstand for their cause, scream foul.

These are the same people who complain when the Whitetail Deer comes romping into their yards and begins to feast on their shrubs and other precious landscape pieces.

The anti-hunting group screams when they or a loved one has careened their vehicle into a deer that jumped out in front of them on the highway causing thousands of dollars in damage. What a shame it is to see those expensive BMW’s, Mercedes’ and Jaguar’s metal all tangled and full of Whitetail Deer fur and blood. It must stop!

The zealots cry when in attendance of a loved one’s funeral because a buck came crashing through the windshield and pierced his/her chest causing massive hemorrhaging resulting in death. Or maybe they tried to avoid the “majestic animal” and went off the road and slammed head on into a large tree. They want to blame the hunter for chasing the deer out of the woods. The anger and hostility is grossly focused in the wrong direction.

Can someone please educate these ignorant people? The deer become more active during this time of year because its mating time. Hunters are unjustly crucified in public for the actions of the Whitetail Deer during the “rut”.

The “rut” for those neophytes that may be reading this piece, is the time of year when able a doe comes into “estrus” or “heat” becoming reproductively receptive. As a result, the buck becomes more active in pursuit of a willing doe and much less cautious.

These complainers also shout to the heavens when the economy is tanking during the hunting season due to low hunting purchases. Less and less hunters head for the woods than ever before.

Though I cannot cite sources in this opinion article, I believe the negative stigma attached to hunters along with higher and higher licensing fees are keeping more and more hunters out of the woods. As a result, the aforementioned complainers will suffer even more.

One complaint I will agree with is the ever shrinking green space that is being gobbled up by developers on behalf of large corporations and urbanites stretching their legs in an attempt to become suburbanites. This sprawl has devastating and long lasting effects on the environment and the natural habitat of all indigenous wildlife.

I submit to you, the largest group to suffer the most from a lack of sportsmen and sportswomen in the woods with the purpose to harvest venison, is the local food banks. Food banks count on donations from hunters. On average, 50 lbs of high protein, lean meat is harvested from one whitetail deer. That’s a lot of meat that is missing from the freezer shelf at the local food bank.

Again, I cannot cite numbers but, I’m sure you can imagine how much venison that is. If I were to venture a guess or a modest estimate, I would say over a ton of potential whitetail deer meat is missing as a combined result of the economy, the complainers and licensing fee increases.

Nationally, hunters contribute to the economy in the millions of dollars if not more. Those contributions are dwindling each and every year as a result of the trickle down effect. Stop the madness!

The contributions could be more, a lot more.

What’s the answer? I don’t have hard line, silver bullet, fix-all answers but, I do have some suggestions.

“Complainers”, get off the backs of hunters and stop trying to make them feel bad for doing what comes naturally as a part of the deeply entrenched urge of the human condition to survive. The genetically programmed human condition of hunter/gatherer has been handed down generation after generation. Hunting is a way to harvest food for survival. Plus, it will benefit you, your car and your precious shrubbery, so back off!

To the states in the union, stop over taxing the hunter and lower the licensing fees. For once, allow the hunting populous to go hunting without penalty. As a result, you may see the economy rise into the positive margin during this time of year. Think of the revenue from ammunition (shut up anti-firearm bleeding hearts) and gun purchases, clothing, gasoline, food and deer processing purchases and not to mention the donations to the local food bank. It’s not just the large retail chain stores or restaurants that benefit, it’s also the localized “Mom & Pop” outfitters, restaurants, taverns, taxidermists, underprivileged and the hungry that largely benefit from hunters.

One last thing and I’ll come down off my soap box. Hunters are the most environmentally friendly and safety conscious people I’ve ever had the pleasure of knowing. I’ve personally learned more about our environment, game preservation and gun safety since I became a hunter than I ever did in school (shut up anti-firearms bleeding hearts – guns don’t kill people, people kill people!).

It’s tragic that school kids aren’t educated about firearms when they are the largest demographic to carry a gun (another rant for another time!). Although I must admit, there are those few bad apples that go out into the woods for the thrill of the kill and the trophy. I despise those few who do it for the wrong reasons! Those idiots are usually the ones who end up “accidentally” shooting another hunter (again, another rant for another time).

Hunters love the outdoors and desperately want to preserve what outdoors are left.

Stop trying to take it from us!

Hunters, I implore you take a stand for what you believe in and take a child into the woods and educate them, if we don’t, no one will.

Cheers!

{ 11 comments… read them below or add one }

Mark November 30, 2010 at 2:26 am

Only 6 percent of the population deer hunt, and that number is declining every day as we humans become more intelligent !
Ask any major insurance company what day has the highest amount of deer related auto accidents and they will tell you it’s opening day of deer season !
(because of deer being pushed out of the woods, not because of the rut )!
When did sitting in a tree, waiting for an animal to walk by and then shooting it ever become a challenge ?
Give a deer a rifle , a six pack , some chew and an IQ of 75 and we can even the odds .

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tyler November 22, 2011 at 6:29 pm

ur stupid mark

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Jessica November 29, 2011 at 1:28 am

For the record, I go hunting and I don’t drink, I don’t do chew, and I’m not stupid and reckless.You do have to take a safety course and pass a test to be able to go shotgun hunting…. Another reason why there’s a lot of auto accidents involving deer is because there is a ton of construction that clears out woods and the homes for the deer. So they’re getting less and less space to live in. Also, the rut does contribute to deer relate auto accidents because during the rut, the bucks will do anything to find a doe, even cross a busy highway. They do things that they normally wouldn’t and are less aware of what they’re doing.

P.S. When did a hobby/sport have to be challenging??

It takes the will and the nerves to sit in the freezing woods for hours just to get a chance to be able to put food on the table, or to be able to give food for the less fortunate.

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wnydeerhunter December 1, 2010 at 12:48 pm

Thank you for sharing your “opinion” and my IQ is 76 for your information.

Cheers!

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chance March 2, 2011 at 4:43 am

marks a douchebag. hunting in more than just sitting in a tree waiting for a deer to walk by. i have a masters degree and am an avid deer hunter; i have learned more information being around a deer camp about life lessons than i have anywhere else. like i said, mark y0u are a douche.

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mitch desgrange November 21, 2011 at 11:57 pm

Thanks for posting this just to let u know winter time I am laid off so since I don’t believe in someone handing me a bridge card I rely on that meat in my freezer and here’s a good number for u 700000 people went hunting with a gun last season six where shot one died I think that’s pritty good since about ten get shot in Detroit every other day so ya guns don’t kill people ignorant people do

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tyler November 22, 2011 at 6:28 pm

i think its a good thing why waste the meat when u could eat it u dumb ass

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TJMOD November 24, 2011 at 1:52 am

I am 20, and I have been hunting for 5-6 years. And I have an IQ of over 100. So, take your steriotypes and shove em.

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T-Wig March 1, 2012 at 6:07 pm

I am a very passionate hunter and I would like to say my opinion on hunting. Hunting is not a sport it is a way of life that has been passed down from generation to generation and us hunters right now would like to keep our heritage going. I am 17 years old an I have been hunting since I was the littlest hunting to me is a way of life I have been around it all my life. I can go out and provide food for my family and land owners and all I have to spend 27.50 on a tag to get over 50 pounds of meat. That to me is bliss. But when i always hearing about people trying to ban hunting it just gets my feathers all ruffled up. How could you ban your own families heritage, your family had to kill an animal to survive and that is what some hunters are doing these days. I could write forever on how i think hunting is not supposed to be banned or taxed anymore.
Thanks

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Jeremy March 29, 2012 at 10:54 pm

I’m 19 and Ive been hunting since I was 6. Theres nothing like spending the whole day in the woods hunting a good ole Kentucky whitetail. I agree with what you have to say. For Mark; I am getting my masters in engineering in a year, most likely quicker than than you finished your associates or bachelors degree, so I clearly have a higher IQ than 75. Hunting is a tradition in my family and will continue to be for years to come.

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Lyndsey February 4, 2014 at 10:04 pm

I am 12. I started deer hunting when I was 6. I wasn’t very thrilled about it at first but now I love it! Yeah my friends think I’m kinda weird! but I DONT CARE!
Here are some Pros and Cons about deer hunting.
Pros:
Tag limits so that the deer population doesn’t go down
Hunting deer results in better survival rates for other deer, and actually keeps others from starving
Sometimes helps prevent car/deer collisions
Gets you and your family food
Helps the economy when people buy ammo and guns made in the U.S.A.
Gets people out of the house and into the wild
Involves lots of exercise

Cons:
It takes a lot of money to keep your land or to make sure no one steals your stand/blind and equipment
The deer could have a disease and if they do then you and your family cant eat it
There is a one in a billion percent chance that you might die in a hunting accident
It takes a lot of money to buy ammo and guns
Once you use all your tags you cat buy more
Running out of ammo
Deer poachers

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