Shooting a duck a goose (or even a duckgoose), or any other native or domestic animal with a target arrow is irresponsible and unethical. It is also, more likely than not, the act of a child and not a hunter.
Having said that, the so-called ‘spate’ of five such attacks reported today by Phil Hickey (PerthNow, August 26th, 2013 here) is anything but a reflection of a growing weapons mentality within the community, as the Greens and the Antis would have the public believe. Rather, it is a perfectly predictable response to a recent ‘spate’ of movies featuring heroes/heroines of such prodigious ability that they can shoot the wings off a fly, or nail bouncing tennis balls to a wall.
In my day it was Dennis the Menace with his trusty shanghai in his back pocket who reigned over a period of bulbul and sparrow slaughter of Biblical proportions. Society ‘banned’ the shanghai and went on its merry way, safe in the knowledge that the slaughter had been halted.
Like hell it had!
Kids simply started carrying backpacks, in which to conceal their shanghais along with an impressive arsenal of clay balls, marbles and ball-bearings each with its own specific target or killing properties, and the hunt continued.
Boys, and occasionally even girls, will be boys!
Unlike the arrow incidents that have featured in the press of late, a bird shot with a shanghai falls to the ground with no telltale projectile protruding from its body. The casual observer sees only a dead or injured bird, whose injuries are indistinguishable from those sustained in an encounter with a windshield or window, the pellet having long-since disappeared into the grass.
No doubt the Antis will cry-out for regulation or even prohibition of bows, but how does one regulate books, trees, reeds, feathers and string? I had a bow when I was a nipper, and it was a pretty effective little demon too as I recall, but I didn’t buy it from a sports store, I made it myself, just as I made my many trusty shanghais....oops, sorry, "bait casters".
Banning or attempting to regulate the use of bows as a response to a relative handful of acts by over exuberant kids would be an over-reaction of quite stunningly self-indulgent proportions. So what’s the alternative...do nothing? Well yes almost, although as a first course of action we could show a little respect for our youth by acknowledging that despite the existence of a world of pressures encouraging them to kill and maim just for the hell of it, the overwhelming majority will choose not to.
The Australian community – hunters and archers among them – already promotes responsible and ethical animal welfare principles, and has done since way back before Adam played fullback for Jerusalem. This should continue, but it should continue with some perspective...
- The Australian population (21mil approx) is greater than it has ever been,
- Bow and arrow are readily available and cheap in all states and territories,
- There is a profusion of video games, movies and even cartoons glamorising violence, including violence with bow and arrow,
- The capacity for the public to capture images of impaled wildlife has never been greater than it is today,
- The national media is lucky to come up with 2 dozen cases of arrow-shot wildlife annually, and
- One notorious 20klm stretch of the Snowy Mountain Hwy alone claims 400+ eastern gray kangaroos annually....and that's just the 400+ that stay put when they're rundown. Who knows how many more continue into the scrub to die slow agonising deaths just out of site?
Decreasing the speed limit on the Snowy Mountains Hwy to 60klm per hour around dawn and dusk when car/kangaroo encounters are most common would increase both human and kangaroo response times considerably, thus saving countless lives.
But while the Antis would not be inconvenienced in the slightest if bows were banned, they would be astonishingly inconvenienced if the time it took them to get to and from work [sic] doubled. Thus, bows should be banned, but road-kills, while deeply regretted, are an unfortunate fact of life.
But while the Antis would not be inconvenienced in the slightest if bows were banned, they would be astonishingly inconvenienced if the time it took them to get to and from work [sic] doubled. Thus, bows should be banned, but road-kills, while deeply regretted, are an unfortunate fact of life.
The Antis will say that I’m wrong, on all counts. They’re a notoriously contrary lot....though I’m sure they would not agree.
Anyway, I'll get outaya way now....