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[at-l] Perception - Cell Phones.
- Subject: [at-l] Perception - Cell Phones.
- From: Lonetrail at aol.com (Lonetrail@aol.com)
- Date: Tue Jan 18 11:30:20 2005
Steve
We lived and worked for a state forest for a while. We had our house in the
center of about 3000 acres. When the snow got to high we had to feed the deer
with bails of hay. I had a German shepherd that actually became part of the
herd. He would run with them.
Then one hunting season the state lifted the ban on deer hunting in the
forest. One thing about deer hunters they like to hunt in their cars or off road
vehicles. It sounded like the forth of July the first day.
The herd would seek shelter around my house they seem to know that you can't
hunt to close to a house. This went on until Christmas Eve, the night before
Christmas not a creature was stirring not even a deer. I looked out my
window and there they were with their ears flicking trying to pick up any sound.
Christmas morning I got up and went to the barn and left the dog our it was
still dark. In about a half hour just at day break all hell broke out that
Christmas morning. Not a creature was left not even a deer.
To this day I have not seen my dog again.
Lonetrail
I live on a piece of rural property. My neighbor hunts with dogs, which is
legal here. Well, my neighbor would like to think, or at least have you
think, he hunts.
He gets together with friends each deer hunting season, each with dogs, each
with a Citizens Band Radio in a vehicle. The ?hunters? pre-position their
vehicles at spots along roads where deer cross. They release their dogs at
a strategic spot and their dogs chase deer. They know the distinctive sound
of each dog and how their own dogs chase deer. They sit in running
vehicles, with the heat on, listening to music, drinking alcoholic beverages
and alert one-another with their radios when deer approach their position.
Just before deer arrive, the ?hunter? leaves the comfort of his vehicle and
shoot at the deer as they cross the road.
These people are not hunters. They are just shooters; poachers to be exact.
My neighbor has asked me several times if he can hunt on my property. I
tell him, I?m not going to deny any neighbor permission to hunt on my land.
But he must hunt on the land, not the road, and I don?t want dogs running
the deer.
My neighbor has never accepted my offer. He has asked me to accompany him
and his friends on one of their ?hunts.? He assures me, that once I
experience the thrill, I will enjoy it and understand why they do this. I
would, implicitly, then give them full permission to run their dogs across
my property. (They already park on the road where deer cross to enter my
land.)
I considered accompanying them for just one time, thinking they would then
reciprocate and accept my offer to hunt and might learn to appreciate
hunting. I decided against this, however, realizing, first, what they are
doing is, simply put, wrong, and second, they aren?t going to understand
what real hunting offers; they aren?t going to accept the inconvenience and
discomfort long enough to appreciate hunting.
The cell phone disagreement reminds me of this ?hunting? difference.
Positions vary. Some want nothing more to intrude upon what wildness we
have, NOTHING. Others consider that we should limit the intrusions. Still
others believe we should have whatever convenience we want, period.
You either feel what wildness / wilderness has to offer or you don?t. If
you feel it, you realize it is unique, precious, fragile and, therefore,
tenuous. You want to protect it, or you could just wipe your behind with
it.
Stopping all further intrusions upon wildness may preserve the wildness.
Limiting intrusions upon wildness slows the erosion of wildness. Accepting
that whatever you want should prevail, unwilling to accept even minor
inconveniences, will destroy wildness almost immediately.
I appreciate those who would allow no further intrusions. They are right,
they may not succeed but they make my efforts, to merely limit intrusion,
much easier.
Steve
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