T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1098.1 | I don't like it | SKIVT::WENER | | Thu Dec 05 1991 13:56 | 11 |
|
Jerry,
I, for one, don't like it because it spooks deer. people are
spending $$ on Uv killer and camo to hide in the woods.. with Blaze
orange, you'll stand out like a sore thumb - even if deer are color
blind. The stuff is extremely bright. I do agree that in high
hunter areas it's probably wiser to wear it than not. I wear red
and green checkered wool clothing and hunt in the north woods. I do
not want to be told I have to wear orange.
- Rob
|
1098.2 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | World leader pretend | Thu Dec 05 1991 14:30 | 12 |
| I respectfully disagree that it spooks deer. I've shot 4 deer in the
last 6 years and my father has shot 9 in the last 11. Both of us wear
blaze orange hats and vests over our wool coats.
It's *motion* that visually spooks deer. Not color.
While I'm generally against mandating anything, it's hard to argue with
the safety records of states like Maine who mandate orange. While red
shows up in the midday hours, it is not very effective in the early
morning or late afternoon.
Mark.
|
1098.3 | some like it some dont | USRCV2::GEIBELL | KING FISHING ON LAKE ONTARIO | Thu Dec 05 1991 14:44 | 36 |
|
If you want you can also treat the orange clothes with UV killer as
well.
RE: "even if deer are color blind." -- this is totally FALSE deer can
see colors, not well and not many but they can see colors, as a matter
of fact RED is one of the easiest colors they can pick out. I read an
interesting article from a professor at Mich. state university, they
dicected a deer's eyeball and apon examinaion under an extremely
powerfull microscope they found color rods and light gathering cones.
As far as the orange goes I have worn orange since I started hunting
some 14 years ago, I have had deer walk right by me +- 10 feet and not
even look at me, I think your movement has more to do with it than the
colors you are wearing.
I for one feel that even if you dont think you should need to wear
the orange there are reasons for it;
example- you are setting against a tree with your red green checks
75 yrds beside you a deer is standing, 25 yrds beside it a
guy is standing with red green checks he pulls up and fires!
if either of the guys were wearing orange the other hunters
would of seen the other.
Believe me your eyes will pick out ORANGE before red any day of
the week. I would rather be seen setting in the woods than laying in a
casket!!! the way I figure it is if I spook a couple deer per season by
wearing orange then we both have the same thing at the end of the day
OUR LIVES! A deer is not worth a human life! I dont like being told I
have to wear something but I dont need to be told to wear orange in the
woods during deer season.
Lee
|
1098.4 | | GIAMEM::J_AMBERSON | | Thu Dec 05 1991 14:45 | 11 |
| I agree with Mark. Motion spooks deer. I wear an orange coat, hat,
and pants. I've killed nine deer in the past six years between Maine
and NY. I've had deer with in ten yards of me. I had one spike walk
out on a logging road with in 15 yds of me while I was standing in the
middle of the road and look right at me. He then looked the other way.
He didn't spook till I moved, then he moved like He$$. I don't care if
I look like a pumpkin out there.
Just my opinion
Jeff
|
1098.5 | Don't like it, but risk is too big not to | HYEND::POPIENIUCK | | Thu Dec 05 1991 14:53 | 43 |
| I don't *like* to wear the orange, just like I'd prefer not to use
seat belts, or wear a helmet when riding a motor cycle, or having my
kids wear lifejackets in a boat/canoe. Heck I wish I could hunt deer
in Maine in rifle season in full camo. But, IMHO, I'd be a damn fool
to do so. I wear the orange because if I don't I significantly
increase my chances of being shot and then my hunting days are over.
(Unless of course there's hunting in the hereafter ;^)
Sounds like there's a couple deceased people in NY that might still be
alive to hunt another day if they wore orange. If I could control the
actions of EVERYONE else who hunts, I wouldn't have to wear it. But I
can't, so I do.
I know we all profess not to put finger to trigger until we've
positively identified our target. I practice this too. However, When
I'm in the woods and I hear a noise that might be a deer coming my way,
there are involuntary things that start to happen. My senses get
sharper. My heart beat increases. Adrenalin starts pumping. I grip
the rifle harder. And I'm looking for that deer. I haven't even moved
a finger yet, but in a sense, I am getting ready to shoot. With us,
more saftey conscious hunters, we don't get further into this
"pre-shoot" mode until we are certain of our target, backdrop, other
hunter locations, etc. Unfortunately, there are others that don't make
that pause to consider their next actions. Who among us hasn't had
"buck fever" of varying degrees at one time or another. Another name
for this disease could be just not practicing what you know is right.
I'm referring to the stories of people ejecting a full magazine of
unfired ammo, staring in disbelief at the 10 pointer that just appeared
out of nowhere and forgetting to raise the rifle until after it walks
away, etc.
I'm not making an excuse for the jerk that shoots at noise or what he
thinks he sees. They deserve the harshest penalty that can be given.
But as long as there are people that don't live in my "perfect" world,
I need to be alert and aware and exercise a certain amount of
protection from them. I don't want to, but the possible consequences
of not doing so are to great in my book. Kind of like going through
life without wanting or buying health insurance. There's a lot of bugs
out there that I just might bump into.
Pete
|
1098.6 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | World leader pretend | Thu Dec 05 1991 14:58 | 11 |
| >If I could control the actions of EVERYONE else who hunts, I wouldn't have
>to wear it. But I can't, so I do.
This, in a nutshell, says it all.
Great note, Pete. Thanks for saying so eloquently what my exact
thoughts are regarding hunter orange.
The question now is, "should it be mandated?"
Mark.
|
1098.7 | Mandate yes, but for the good of the sport, not mine | HYEND::POPIENIUCK | | Thu Dec 05 1991 15:10 | 15 |
| Mark, I'll probably draw some fire (wearing ornage or not :^) but I
believe it should be mandated. Not because I believe it's "in my
best interest" (which I do feel), but because I believe it actually
helps protect the sport of hunting. With fewer "accidents" (or call
them whatever you will), there is less fuel for the anti-hunters.
Statistically, hunting *IS* a safe sport. I'm old enough to remember
the pre-orange law days. There were LOTS more people shot and killed.
My uncle's best friend was one of those shot in Ashburnham, MA back in
the 60's.
So I believe it should be mandated for the good of the sport. "Live
Free or Die" is fine, but I do believe that if there are too many of
the "Die's", then the live free will cease too. IMHO. (By the way, I'm
limiting this to Orange here. I'm not for more gun control laws, etc.
Just want to make sure no one thinks I'm opening up that can of worms.)
|
1098.8 | | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Thu Dec 05 1991 15:13 | 28 |
|
I agree mostly about deer and blaze orange, expect when not hunting on
snow, what are you going to blend in with? Maybe if you're in
birches...
I don't wear orange on normal occasions. Occasions I will wear orange
(a vest) when it's pooring rain and I want to wear my camo Gore-Tex duck
hunting parka. It's personal choice. Maybe I'm stubborn, some will
say I'm stupid. I must hunt with alot of stupid people, most of them
wear green wool plaid. I find it hard to accept that someone can
mistake a deer for a human, no matter what the human is wearing
(barring a full whitetail hide). I know it happens, it's happened alot
in NY this year, and once in VT that I know of. I'd like to know more
about the circumstances of each accident, it seems most of them are
real late in the afternoon, or when the light is really poor.
Personally I carry a mini-Mag flashlight, very small, and I sit until
there's no question it's dark...I'm not hunting mind you, and before I
get up I turn my light on...but who can tell, it wouldn't suprise me if
some fool blows me away seeing that flashlight bouncing around...it's
hard to figure and those fools shouldn't be out there. There's alot of
people that are trigger happy, and don't follow good ethics.
All I do is pray I come home safe, or that any action I take won't
endanger anyone else. The things we're talking about now is why I
love bowhunting so much, even though I've never killed a deer with my
bow...
Kevin
|
1098.9 | are deer red checked??? | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Thu Dec 05 1991 15:16 | 36 |
| Ahhh, hunter orange... that magic color that saves countless lives and
distinguishes a hunter from a deer.
If I have to be wearing hunter orange to protect myself from some
hunter who thinks deer wear green plaid or red check and camo, then
theres a more serious problem here than we realize.
Actually I wouldn't mind wearing it except that its manufactured in the
most awful choices of material... Vinyls that harden up in cold
weather, cheap nylon or very frail cloth... Lousy styles, cheaply
produced vests with thin elastic waist bands... If I could find a nice
comfortable vest made of something quiet, with a few pockets, sized to
fit big guys, for a decent price I wouldn't mind useing it. I've
looked everywhere for a decent one but to no avail. I've gone so far
as to have my wife make one for me... but again, the material available
is very thin and frays easily... chinsy stuff... What I did see that
I really like is a vest that actuall looks like a harness of some sort.
It's no more than a 2-3" strip of material that goes over the
shoulders, crosses at the back and comes across at the waist like a
vest. I think I saw one picture in one of the hunting magazines... try
to find one however!!! One of the guys has a mesh elasticised vest
with velcro straps to fasten it shut in the front... excellent, again
though I havn't found one anywhere... I'd pay someone if they could
locate one for me... XL or XXL ;^)
In VT none of the poeple we hunt with wears orange, and we havn't had
any accidents or close calls... we all wear red plaid jackets, camo
pants, and assorted lids from camo to red crushers, baseball hats to
camo bush hats.
SO while I don't have a problem with the color itself, what does bug me
is that people associate the lack of orange as a deer and assume it
alright to shoot... if its such a safety issue why only hunters...
what about hikers and nature lovers and people walking the dogs etc...
FWIW, Fra
|
1098.10 | "Pro Hunter Ed. & Blaze" !!!!!!!! | SALEM::PAPPALARDO | | Thu Dec 05 1991 15:28 | 12 |
|
I agree with Mark,Jeff, and Pete. The issue at hand is "SAFETY". None
of us can control the actions/reactions of another hunter. The "Blaze
Issue" is for safety only. If deer could carry guns most of us would be
dead! This subject and the Hunter Safety Education issue were discussed
last year when N.H. was voting on these issues. The are very sore
subjects, but are backed quite well with stats. With the most recent
death of a hunter (1991) here in N.H. both issues are sure to be
brought up as a voting issue again.
Guy
|
1098.11 | more than that... | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Thu Dec 05 1991 15:52 | 24 |
|
How do any of us know if it would have made a difference in any of
the discussed tragedies, if the person had on X amount of blaze orange?
Blaze orange is not the issue. The issue is people not knowing what
the hell they're doing out there, and not giving a damn. Hunting has
turned into a game of bragging rights for a lot of people, where killing
the game is the only thing that counts. It's not much different with
the rest of our society where morals and ethics have been thrown into
the gutter.
Another issue is the problem of scoping that movement. Maybe we should
mandate open sights, because there weren't hunting accidents in the
"old days." I carry bino's with me to scope something in question, or
if I want to identify a member of my hunting party...but the scoping of
other hunters is fairly common, I've had it happen to me. Do the
idiots that scope you when walking through the woods really know how
extremely dangerous that behavior is? Do they realize a scope really isn't
a passive device when attached to a firearm..point of impact is usually
somewhere near the crosshairs, do these idiots realize this?
It's not as simple as mandating blaze orange folks...
Kevin
|
1098.12 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Turning Circles | Thu Dec 05 1991 16:05 | 48 |
| re: Jim
> I would like to see some sound, logical reasons why it's not a good idea.
I think that perhaps the strongest argument against _mandatory_ hunter orange
is that the woods do not contain only hunters and it is unreasonable to
place them at a higher risk than hunters if _they_ do not wear orange. I think
that such a tactic is bound to backfire on this point:
re: Pete
>Not because I believe it's "in my
> best interest" (which I do feel), but because I believe it actually
> helps protect the sport of hunting. With fewer "accidents" (or call
> them whatever you will), there is less fuel for the anti-hunters.
But a higher percentage of those remaining accidents will be non-hunters.
"The Public" will tolerate 100 hunter deaths more easily than 1 non hunter
killed by hunters. It provides a better emotional argument than currently exists
for increasing "keep away" areas from buildings to even absurd levels.
As far as safety goes, I believe that it is up to each hunter to individually
assess the risks to him/herself and choose attire accordingly. I fully believe
that if all hunters were required by law to wear orange, fewer hunters would
be injured and killed. I also believe that if all cars were required to have
governors on them that prevented them from ever exceeding 65mph, we would
save thousands more lives, but I don't support that either. You do not endanger
anyone else when you decline to wear orange. I believe that the right to make
that choice is reserved to ther individual.
Personally speaking, I rarely fail to wear at least some orange. I always wear
an orange vest and usually a hat when I hunt public land or private land
with unknown hunters on it. On private land when there is little or no
reasonable probability that I will meet up with any other hunters, I may opt
to wear only a red hat and red check. I have an orange vest over my red check
hunting coat that never comes off. I have a red check hunting vest that is
reversable to orange; I'd keep it on the orange side all the time but the
pockets are all on the red side.
My personal decision is to wear orange because I want to assist other hunters
in identifying me as something definitely not to shoot at. The hunter has the
responsibility to make that determination anyway, but I want to make the job
especially easy because I have a wife and kids who depend on me. If someone
else wants to even just psychologically increase their chances of getting
a deer by trading off _their own_ personal safety, that's their call in my
opinion.
The Doctah
|
1098.13 | | CSC32::J_HENSON | I'll 2nd that amendment! | Thu Dec 05 1991 17:00 | 52 |
| >> <<< Note 1098.12 by WAHOO::LEVESQUE "Turning Circles" >>>
>>re: Jim (uh, that's Jerry)
>>> I would like to see some sound, logical reasons why it's not a good idea.
>> I think that perhaps the strongest argument against _mandatory_ hunter orange
>>is that the woods do not contain only hunters and it is unreasonable to
>>place them at a higher risk than hunters if _they_ do not wear orange. I think
>>that such a tactic is bound to backfire on this point:
Doctah,
Since this is the exact question I posed, I'll offer a rebuttal to your
remarks. First of all, my question concerned the voluntary use of hunter
orange, not the MANDATORY use.
Other than that, your argument doesn't wash with me. Even if we
have mandatory hunter orange for HUNTERS only, it still doesn't
prohibit non-hunters from wearing it. Sort of like it is now.
Using your logic, anyone not wearing hunter orange (in the field, that
is) is at a higher risk than those wearing it. In other words, those
who chose not to wear it are accepting that risk. The same thing
applies if it's mandatory. Those non-hunters who choose to be in
the field during hunting season and not wear hunter orange are accepting
that risk. It is still their option as to how they dress.
If equal sharing of risk is really what you want, perhaps we should
OUTLAW hunter orange. I know that's what it would take to get me to
not wear it.
By the way, non-hunters also live in Colorado, where HO is mandatory.
I haven't seen this become an issue.
The other argument that I have problems with is that the widespread
use of HO lulls those non-accomplished (or whatever adjective you
choose) into thinking if it ain't orange, shoot it. The same can
be said for any safety color. If people are not going to clearly
and accurately identify their target before shooting, the use
of HO won't make a difference, except that it will make it a bit
harder for them to mis-identify you.
I can understand one's aversion to anything that is mandatory. In
fact, I didn't like the seat belt law until I got rear-ended a couple
of years ago. Now, I don't even back out of the garage with buckling
up, and it doesn't have anything to do with a law.
I will say that I'm surprised at the number of pro-HO replies. I
really figured that it would be quite the opposite. Live and learn.
Jerry
|
1098.14 | | GIAMEM::J_AMBERSON | | Thu Dec 05 1991 17:09 | 15 |
| RE: Kevin
I don't beleive that anyone here believes it is as simple as mandating
hunter orange. My feelings are that I want to take every _reasonable_
chance at decreasing the odds that I will get shot, while at the same
time still being able to enjoy hunting. Hunter orange does not detract
from my hunting experience. It does _help_ (not guarentee) other
hunters to identify me more easily. I can't see any logic in not
wearing it. Until Im convinced that everyone out there is responsible
and diligent in identifying there target before pulling the trigger,
I'll continue to wear orange. It's not a cure all, but it's an easy,
painfree way to improve the odds that I'll walk out of the woods rather
then be carried out.
Jeff
|
1098.15 | | APHE::BULLARD | | Thu Dec 05 1991 17:25 | 27 |
| Hunter orange is required here in CO, and I agree with this rule.
It helps me keep tabs on my hunting partners when we do a parallel
at a distance type mountain sweep. I can spot hunters 5 miles across
a valley with my naked eye, and readily observe if a certain area might
be 'uncovered' and worth hunting. I have been able to get very close
to deer (upwind), and only spooked them from 'fast' movement (slow
movement 'still hunting' allowed me to get very close). The line that
deer can see orange is a bunch of bunk. Even if they do have a few color
rods in their eyes, it can only pick out color at extremely close
range (within 5 feet maybe). Maybe a equivalent from our point of view
would be to pick out 1" circles of blaze orange spaced at 10 feet against
a grey background at 500 yrds. You would see solid grey with no orange.
Your retina does'nt have dense enough color rods to see the orange circles
at this range.
For the slob hunter shooting at sounds, even a tiny glimpse of blaze
orange through a bush might keep you from being shot. For the idea that
people will shoot anything that isn't orange; lets say slobs will be
slobs but you'll be more visible, and good hunters always are sure of
the target before shooting anyway. The most convincing argument is that
if you are in the background of any hunters quarry YOU WILL BE SEEN
even if the animal is running and they are pressured to do a quickly
executed shot. Maybe your hunting partner would take the shot because
he could see exactly where you are and know it was safe, instead of
passing up an animal because he knew you were back there....somewhere.
Blaze orange roolze!!!
chuck
|
1098.16 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Turning Circles | Thu Dec 05 1991 17:38 | 14 |
| Sorry, Jim. I misread that. I thought you were asking about opinions regarding
mandatory orange.
>Using your logic, anyone not wearing hunter orange (in the field, that
>is) is at a higher risk than those wearing it. In other words, those
>who chose not to wear it are accepting that risk.
But risk exists only because people are hunting. And non-hunters believe that
an equally viable solution to that increased risk is to ban hunting (I'm
not kidding!)
I think it's a good idea; I just don't think it should be mandatory. I am
consistently philosophically opposed to mandatory anything that in the
end affects only you.
|
1098.17 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Curse you, Red Baron! | Thu Dec 05 1991 17:45 | 11 |
| One thing I don't like is the attitude some hunters (and yes I
know they're a small minority, but...) take, that if it _isn't_
wearing orange, it's OK to shoot at. In Mass. I have to wear it,
and do so. In Vermont, I don't have to, and usually don't. (There
are times, like when hunting new areas, or spots I know are more
heavily hunted, I do put on some orange.)
I dislike having Big Brother _order_ me to wear it. I also would
like to believe that the other guy is also a sensible hunter who
ID's his target. I hate the need to assume that I _will_ encounter
a bozo.
|
1098.18 | a thought | SA1794::CHARBONND | Curse you, Red Baron! | Thu Dec 05 1991 17:50 | 3 |
| Let's turn it around. What would happen if we _outlawed_ blaze
orange? Would some of these boneheads maybe get it through their
thick skulls that they have to *look* before they shoot?
|
1098.19 | | SALEM::PAPPALARDO | | Thu Dec 05 1991 18:48 | 9 |
|
As one of my hunting partners stated while we were hunting in Canada
who wears Blaze orange from head to toe, "If I get shot and killed
for being mistaken for game, If and When they catch the person my
spouse will have one hell of a good law suit".
Guy
|
1098.20 | I live to hunt and want to keep it that way. | HYEND::POPIENIUCK | | Thu Dec 05 1991 19:32 | 12 |
| A bonehead is a bonehead. Whether it's mandatory HO or mandatory
non-HO. I happen to feel that it's wise to wear it and don't complain
about the law that makes mandatory in Maine where I hunt deer. On the
other side though, I would not sign a petition to force it on anyone
either. I hate all the big brother laws. Speaking solely for myself,
I think it's a good idea to wear it.
I want to increase my odds of living to hunt another day, inspite of
the bozos and boneheads. A person who has the option of not wearing HO
must just accept the fact that their odds are somewhat less favorable
than mine. Whatver shakes your tree.....
|
1098.21 | | DECWET::HELSEL | Legitimate sporting purpose | Thu Dec 05 1991 20:36 | 6 |
| Deja Vu.
Didn't we have this discussion at least two times?
(I like the thing about the lawsuit. Too bad most hunters are broke.
I mean I'd rather be shot by accident by a golfer :-)
|
1098.22 | pro orange | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | only one shot, please! | Fri Dec 06 1991 11:00 | 39 |
| I am kinding of jumping into this subject late, but just saw it and
want to throw my $.02 worth in.
I live in Georgia, where it is the law to wear 500 square inches of
blaze orange when hunting. This ususally consists of a cheap, loud,
plastic vest. Out of 800,000 hunters in the state, hunting almost
every weekend of the season, that is about 8,800,000 people total in
the woods hunting. Out of all that number, last year there were 43
hunting accidents in the woods. Out of that, 4 were shooting
accidents. Those odds, 4 out of 8,800,000 sell me on wearing my
orange.
Now, should it be mandatory? Yes, only to a point. I think it should
be mandatory that you wear some amount of orange, even if it is broken
up in a cammo pattern, when moving about the woods. I personally have
hunted in loud solid colors, my first hunting trip, and have had a doe
come within 10 yds of me, lookin right at me, and didn't run. As
stated earlier, it is motion. I look at wearing orange as a defensive
measure for my safety, and not as a hassle to deal with during hunting.
Even hunting private land with people I know, I will not even think
about going into the woods without my orange. Now, once I get to my
stand, I take it off. But you can bet your ass, before I climb down my
stand, the first thing I do is put on my orange, and lower my rifle.
In summary, you are the one with control of your rifle, but you sure as
hell don't have control of anyone elses rifle. So, to better my odds
of not being dragged out of the woods like a deer, I wear my orange.
As far as being loud, and cheap, and not finding a good orange garment
to wear, my friend Earl, who has not even entered hunting notes yet,
has a reversible blaze orange, realtree cammo insulated vest which is
real neat. Wear it to your stand, reverse it once you get to your
stand. I feel it is safe to hunt in your stand without orange. Most
hunting accidents are people shooting at people moving around in the
bush, not sitting in a tree.
Orange saves lives. Mandate it. 55mph is the speed limit. it saves
lives, it's the law.
|
1098.23 | Why not madate orange for deer | PARVAX::TIHIN | | Fri Dec 06 1991 11:32 | 21 |
|
Manadtory orange == stupid law. If you mandate orange you only mandate it
for the hunters. Since other people use the woods, I believe you would
increase the probability of them being shot since you would establish the mind
set that people in the woods are required to wear orange.
A better law would be to mandate that the deer wear orange. Then the idiots can
be trained to shoot at things that are only orange thus avoiding the needles
slaughter of innocent people, trees and other animals.
I wear orange from head to foot. I have shot two deer that were less than
15 yards away from me. One I shot while I was on the ground the other while
in the tree stand. In both cases the deer froze and looked straight at me I
froze too. I think they suspected something but did not spook. When they
looked away and started walking I took the safety off, aimed for the heart/lung
and took my shot. Motion, noise and smell spook deer and not orange. If you
move, it may easier to spot movement if you are wearing orange then
if you are wearing camo. I don't know but I have not had any problems of
taking a deer for the past ten years with my orange clothing so I wear it.
I would object to the idea of "having to wear orange". You know the risks so you
take your chances. Wearing orange should be a personal choice.
|
1098.24 | | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Fri Dec 06 1991 12:14 | 20 |
|
a previous reply stated something to the effect of he believes in
hunter orange and agrees it should be mandatory to a point, but removes
it upon arrival to his stand... something to that effect. basically
what i'm hearing is that it should be mandatory but with exceptions...
Is it legal to remove your 500 sq" of hunter orange when you reach your
stand?? probably not. so is this really a viable law? I know alot of
mass hunters who do the same, whether right or wrong... if it's not
going to be followed to the letter of the law then why make it a law at
all.
I still don't think it's a orange issue so much as a educational and
common sense issue.
When the time comes that VT opens up a doe season, then you can be sure
i'll have some of it on... Mass is mandatory, and i wear it, don't
like it for the reasons stated earlier, but i wear it...
Fra
|
1098.25 | I wear orange, but don't want it mandatory | SMURF::PUSHEE | | Fri Dec 06 1991 13:14 | 20 |
| We have to darn many laws already. We need fewer laws, not more. The more
laws we make, the less people feel the need to rely on common sense.
Yes, I wear orange when I'm in the woods during NH firearms season. I have
been known to hike into my stand (well before light) with a waterfowl
parka in my backpack and wearing an orange vest. At the stand I'll tie the
vest around a tree just above my head and wear the camo while I sit. If
I'm still hunting though, I wear lots of orange.
I'm a bit less careful during muzzleloader season - usually wear red/black
check jacket, but usually also have an orange hat.
During archery only season, I'll be in camo.
As I understand it, Maine has mandatory orange. How long has this
been in effect? Was it in effect a couple of years ago when that
woman was shot in her backyard? Did the law help her, or could it
have contributed to her death?
- Dave
|
1098.26 | | MCIS5::PAPPALARDO | A Pure Hunter | Fri Dec 06 1991 13:57 | 23 |
|
I always wear a blaze orange coat and crusher-hat. I never have had a
problem with deer, some have almost stepped into my stand.
As for making it the Law, I feel anything non-orange will be at risk.
Movement as mentioned earlier will wreck a days hunt more than the
color.
Just my 2cents......
Rick
Oh yeah....U.V. killer, breath camo, BAW! Ha,ha,ha,ha,he,!!!!!!
BTW:: There's a new process from a clothing manufactuer in Canada that
by using presure, presses the orange color into the Wool.
You can buy a 100% Wool coat in orange that will not fade over
time. I read this in latest, The Sportsman's Guide. You know
its like a Gander Mountain book.
|
1098.27 | I still don't like it | SKIVT::WENER | | Fri Dec 06 1991 13:58 | 20 |
|
I happen to believe that if hunter orange is mandated by law to
be worn by hunters during rifle big-game seasons, then we should
make the law state that anyone (hunters and non) wear hunter orange
when afield during this season. The problem with this is obvious
bad press on hunters - we're trying to have our cake and eat it too.
re Bob Harris a few back regarding taking off your orange on stand,
why do this? The reason I think people do it is because when
you move while wearing hunter orange, you look like a neon sign!!
I'll maintain still that it's easier for a deer to see you while
you're wearing orange than if you're not. The stuff is supposed to
attract attention...
regarding the woman who was shot in Maine a couple of years ago,
I think the "mandatory Hunter orange" law makes it easier for these
situations to happen. For crying out loud, I'll never understand
how someone could be mistaken for a deer -wearing orange or not!
- Rob
|
1098.28 | Not just big-game problem... | TARKIN::AHO | How about some SMOKED SKEET? | Fri Dec 06 1991 14:20 | 18 |
|
I've noticed that we're talking mostly about big-game
hunting on the HO issue.... I've recently been hearing
of BIRD hunters getting shot, so about 3 years ago I
started wearing a FULL orange vest for BIRD hunting,
now it's going some when a MAN looks like a BIRD !!!
I realize that bird hunting accidents are most likely
"sound" shooting through thick brush, but we still
have to identify the game don't we??
BTW As you have noticed this is one of MY HOT-BUTTONS !!
I just can't believe these CLOWNS seem to multiply
like rabbits ;-);-)
~Mike~ (Who want SANITY put back into hunting)
|
1098.29 | | ESKIMO::RINELLA | | Fri Dec 06 1991 16:16 | 14 |
|
I don't think it should be mandatory but I have and always will wear
a HO vest and hat..When it's cold out I'll even wear HO gloves..I too
had a doe crossing some railroad tracks that stopped and looked both
ways before crossing and looked right at me. Never knew I was there
until I moved..I would much rather at least feel safe, that I am wearing
HO, then be worried about some fool that is going to shot at movement.
I can't understand how anyone can do this. I never have or ever will
raise my gun at anything I cant say for sure is my target. There again
I tend to spend more time at the archery only refuge in N.H.(more deer):')
Gus
|
1098.30 | | SALEM::PAPPALARDO | | Fri Dec 06 1991 16:20 | 13 |
|
Last year part of the debate of HO was also during the overlap of
bird season and archery season. Here in N.H. our bear season starts
usually at the begining of Sept. and there isn't a huge crowd of
hunters for this season. Our archery season starts in the middle of
Sept. with Birds opening around the 1st of October. I never really
thought about when I wasn't a Bow hunter but when shooting at a flushed
bird the height of your shot flight could end up hitting an archer in
a tree stand. This was another point of different seasons overlaping
and the dangersof them.
Guy
|
1098.31 | more thoughts... | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Fri Dec 06 1991 16:55 | 21 |
|
re .30
The odds of that are pretty slim. But Murphy's laws to applly to
hunting. I had a bird hunter come by me this year, I let him know I was
there, and he politely changed his course.
Okay, for those pro HO people, do you bowhunt? If so, and you all feel
it make no difference on the deer, than why not wear it bow hunting?
Maybe you do...I'm just curious.
I think the deer are in a different 'mode' during the firearms season,
much more spooked, moving, etc. And sometimes they get pushed out
of their core range. The core range is pretty well memorized, rocks,
stumps, etc., but outside of that, they wouldn't know you from a stump.
That picture of the area isn't as well defined. They certainly aren't
as relaxed, the deer I see anyway.
Kevin
|
1098.32 | | BPO406::LEAHY | | Fri Dec 06 1991 17:04 | 38 |
| re 28:
Mike, How do we get the SANITY back??? I stopped hunting about 18 years ago
(Ma.) because it was getting to crazy for me. About 6 years ago I decided to
give shotguning another try, would'nt you know the second time out a slug
hits the tree I am in fornt of about 18" from my head ( I looked like the
Great Pumpkin) but it didn't stop the old geezer from letting loose all 5
shots at the running doe's without looking or caring (what made it worse
was his young companion son or grandson maybe) getting a view on "how to hunt".
Anyways, I took up bow hunting..a little saner I thought.
Now for what I really want to say, and this is hard because it means I have
to critize friends, (no longer hunting partners but still friends so far).
When I started archery it was with two friends how had been bow hunting for a
few years. Now I really did not know what type of hunters they were but I knew
what type of people they were and figured they would be the type i would'nt mind
hunting with (WRONG), I won't go into the little things they did that i thought
was not right and I told them how I felt on certain occassions. Well, 2 years
ago they started telling me about these guys the work with that also hunt and
they related a few stories, i don't know what they were expecting for a reaction
but what they got must have suprised them cause I asked them point blank why
they didn't turn them in to a EPO officer, this happened a few times and then
they stopped telling me the stories. Ok, now i am wondering about hunting
with them, one guy in particular has taken some shots that to me were real
questionable. Last year I got them both to take a hunter safety course. It
didn't help. I couldn't make opening day of bow and they went with the other
guys and my friend tells me that night of a spike that he jumped as he was
leaving the woods that night, he tells me how he grabbed an arrow and let it
fly missing the spike but (and he thought this was funny) ending up in the
SHOULDER OF THE ROAD, I asked him where the hell was he coimng from and what
road (route 9 in Belchertown). I decided then that I would rather sit home
and read about hunting than be in the woods with him. And I know there is no
doubt in my mind that BOTH OF THEM are sound shooters even with HS. So now
I wait for my son to decide if he might like to try it next year, if not
I have a good supply of books to read during the season.
Sorry for the rambling but I had to get this off my chest.
Jack
|
1098.33 | | ESKIMO::RINELLA | | Fri Dec 06 1991 17:26 | 16 |
|
re. 31
I am an avid bow hunter and do not wear HO. My season usually
starts in the middle of september and once gun season gets into full
gear, I do my bow hunting in an archery only game refuge. 60% of my
hunting is done at this refuge so I dont feel any need to wear HO. If I
am hunting in gun teritory then I will wear HO to and from my stand but
once in a tree stand I will usaully take it off unless there is heavy
pressure. I also do this during muzzle loading as some one stated
earlier.
Gus
|
1098.34 | Have I met you??? | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Fri Dec 06 1991 18:01 | 10 |
| Jack,
this has nothing to do with hunter orange, but did I build you a bow??
a martin bobcat??
The name looked really familiar...
We now return you to your regularly scheduled program...
Fra
|
1098.35 | <Just Another Opinion> | BTOVT::SEARS_A | Welcome to Vermont, now leave | Fri Dec 06 1991 18:10 | 13 |
|
I agree with mandating HO in states that have a high number of
hunters per square mile (personaly I avoid these area's like a plague).
But in states that have remote wilderness, I believe it should be up to
the individual, for instance where I hunt I like to be able to blend in
with the terrain, which means wearing green or red checked wool. And If
I do see another hunter I am confident that I dont have to worry about
being shot at, because he is probably there for the same reason I am to
escape the chance of runing into a slob hunter, not to talk about the
deer being in there regular schedules (not spooked).
Also I believe that the majority of these so called accidents happen
where the number of hunters is great, and not just because the hunter
doesnt have any orange on.
|
1098.36 | Preach.... | EMDS::PETERSON | | Fri Dec 06 1991 18:46 | 35 |
|
I wear it, and make my kids wear it too, when we walk in the woods
behind my house. This JUST started this year when I spotted a
tree stand up during Bow season.(since removed).
I enjoy my Sat./Sun. morning 'hikes', with my dog, and usually take
one of the kids with me. I won't stop because someone might be
hunting there. One thing I really like to do is (leave the *#^% dog
at home) show the kids how to follow deer tracks. This could be
a dangerous hobby during hunting season-so if we go out on Sat.
the Orange goes on. Could I give it up for a week or two-mebe.
Should I have to? Nope. The area is 'legal' for hunting(heck, I could
be legal on my own property!). The thing is it's not isolated by
any stretch of the imagination. the area is essentially the bottom
end of a 'penninsula' that extends into Hudson/Marlboro Mass. from the
Army Base in Sudbury and further.
HO is a good idea, but ....like was said before, I make my kids
wear it-because I feel like it. I don't know who might be in 'my'
woods. Mebe it's one of you fine gents, mebe it's some drunk from
<.....> who is a slob.
(Face it, in Mass. it's easy to get a hunting license...mabey that
should be looked at??....)
Should it be mandated?? I think not. NOT because it's a bad
product, but because it takes a little piece of responsibility
away. You are responsible to identify your target-period.
Do I wear it? Yes, because this country is becoming filled with
those who refuse to accept any and all responsibility for their
actions.
phew..... have a nice weak-end...
|
1098.37 | | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | only one shot, please! | Mon Dec 09 1991 10:48 | 18 |
| re. 27, why do I take my orange off on my stand? Try to bring up your
rifle wearing one of those orange vests, and just hear the sounds it
makes. I might as well lean against a pine tree instead of a hardwood.
BUT, like I said previously, on private land, I take it off when I get
to my stand. On public land, I just don't hunt it anymore, to
dangerous. Also, it sounds like things are a little more quiet down
south than up north.
IF they made a quiet, comfortable, less restrictive orange vest, I
think I would wear it all the time, but they don't, at least not in
my budget.
Bob
btw, my hunting season ended sunday, with the exception of one more day
on Saturday December 28th. Still no deer. My wife is questioning if I
am really going hunting or not.
|
1098.38 | not me (family circus) | BPO406::LEAHY | | Mon Dec 09 1991 10:54 | 2 |
| re:34
Fra, no it wasn't me...Jack
|
1098.39 | I mean quiet not "quite" | DECWET::HELSEL | Legitimate sporting purpose | Mon Dec 09 1991 13:53 | 6 |
| re .37:
Why don't you get some orange material that is quite. You don't have
to wear orange plastic.
/brett
|
1098.40 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Turning Circles | Mon Dec 09 1991 14:29 | 3 |
| Both my orange vests are quiet; one's a wool reverseable (~$40) and the other
came with my coat, and is made of "10 mile cloth" from LL Bean (~$15 but offers
no insulating properties.)
|
1098.41 | | LUDWIG::SADIN | Let me drink about that... | Tue Dec 10 1991 23:55 | 7 |
|
my orange vest is quilted and very quiet....they're out there guys,
just gotta look for 'em.....
|
1098.42 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | and straight on 'til morning. | Wed Dec 11 1991 09:43 | 3 |
| Here in Western Mass. they sell one that appears to be netting,
but it's legal and very soft/quiet. Plus they only cost six bucks
or so ;-)
|
1098.43 | | CSC32::D_PELTONEN | Nice People Don't Own Guns | Wed Dec 11 1991 14:40 | 7 |
|
I got a real nice vest from Cabela's for this past season.
Cost about $15, fits over my coat and doesn't interfere with
arm movement whatsoever, is quiet in the brush and about as
orange as can be.
DAP
|
1098.44 | And the answer is.... | CSC32::J_HENSON | I'll 2nd that amendment! | Tue Dec 17 1991 19:09 | 14 |
| It appears that this topic has died down, so I decided to reread and
summarize the results. In particular, I have tried to interpret
each reply as being either for or against voluntary use of HO, and
for and against mandatory use. As there were several who made more
than one reply, I tried to count each person who replied only once.
Also note that not everyone expressed an easily interpretable opinion
on both issues. Anyway, here's the results.
For voluntary use 17
Against voluntary use 3
For mandatory use 7
Against mandatory use 6
Jerry
|
1098.45 | 1 more for Mandatory.. | CSC32::SCHIMPF | | Thu Dec 19 1991 03:58 | 12 |
| Jerry, add one more too the mandatory list. I feel that wearing HO
protects 99% of the "careful" hunters from the 1% "slob" hunters.
Also, I have for many years fought the issue of CHEAP PLASTIC Ho vests.
What I did was go and buy a yard of HO material at one of the fabric
stores; Folded the sucker in half, cut out a half moon in the middle,
Sewed(sp) 4 "pig'ns" on the side and bingo; Nice, quite blaze orange
penny vest. It is a little large, but hey for $3.00 or $4.00 and
the last 5 years it has served it's purpose VERY Well.
Jeff
|
1098.46 | Add me to the list.... | XCUSME::MALONE | the melon man | Thu Dec 19 1991 11:37 | 9 |
| I'm with him!!! You can add me to the list also. If you look around
you can find a nice HO coat or vest that isn't noisey. My wife bought
me a HO quilted vest for hunting season and it's very quiet. I think
that it should be mandatory. When I went to my huner safety class they
pushed HO alot.
just my $.02 worth.......
|
1098.47 | Keep mandate's to yourself please... | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Thu Dec 19 1991 12:39 | 13 |
|
The misconception is that people with HO don't get shot by the careless
slobs. If you guys think that's the case it's just wrong. I'd like to
see the stats on what the victims were wearing when shot. I believe I
read in here a fatality from MA in which the target was wearing the
required HO.
I vote for volunteer use, but by any stretch of the imagination it's
no cure all.
Where what you want. Force responsibility on our fellow hunters.
Kevin
|
1098.48 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A Day at the Races | Thu Dec 19 1991 14:38 | 15 |
| >I'd like to see the stats on what the victims were wearing when shot.
In NH last year, hunter orange was not worn by any of the people who were
shot as a result of game misidentification or not knowing what was behind the
target. However, in several of these cases, it is doubtful if hunter orange
would have made any difference. In addition, a solid percentage of the
accidents were unrelated to whether the hunter could see the victim. Hunter
orange is far from a cure all.
Hunter orange doesn't help reduce self inflicted wounds, post hunting
accidents, etc. It does help enough of the time to merit serious consideration
though.
Maybe the real answer is forcing all hunters to wear brown and white
coats. Then we'd _really_ have to verify our targets. :-)/2
|
1098.49 | How? | CSC32::J_HENSON | I'll 2nd that amendment! | Thu Dec 19 1991 14:53 | 16 |
| >> <<< Note 1098.47 by BTOVT::REMILLARD_K >>>
>> -< Keep mandate's to yourself please... >-
>> Where what you want. Force responsibility on our fellow hunters.
Kevin,
How do you propose that this be accomplished? Competency
tests? Stiffer fines and penalties for violations? Mandatory
hunter safety training?
I don't think that anybody in here would disagree with your
statement. I sure don't. I just don't know of a good way
to do it.
Jerry
|
1098.50 | perhaps I rambled some... | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Thu Dec 19 1991 19:05 | 65 |
|
re .49
I agree with the methods you suggested. But those won't stop it
either.
It's a big issue. It's really not about hunter orange. It's about
greed, it's about pressure, it's about irresponsible behavior.
The greed and pressure come from some people seeing a successful hunter
as one that "brings home the deer every year." Or the almost heroic
display some hunters are given. It makes us all want to be like them.
Our society is so driven by immediate satisfaction. Drugs, sex, all of
it, I want it now and I want it all. Hunter orange can't stop it.
How many people ribbed you because you didn't get a deer? It really
use to bother me, and I put pressure on myself to "be succeesful".
Most of us in this file are above that, I don't have to kill an animal
to have a successful deer hunting season. I really realized this, this
year. Once I realized what was bothering my, and I changed my attitude
things slowed down, and I really enjoyed myself.
I will fight mandatory hunter orange because I feel strongly that
irresponsible behavior should be dealt with. The same goes for
gun control, if I can use an analogy, the guns aren't the issue. When
someone chooses to use a gun to solve his problems, instead of
discussion, arbitration, etc. than that person has acted irresponsibly.
When someone fails to identify his target, and understands that when the
bullet leaves the barrel there's no gettin' it back, and kills someone,
than that person has acted irresponsibly.
Taking guns from people won't stop people from behaving irresponsibly.
Just as mandating HO won't stop irresponsible hunting deaths. There's no
way I'll believe that a person who is about to kill you with a gun,
because you cut him off on the highway for instance, would act
anymore rationally if he didn't have a gun. But if that person was
conditioned to react under that response, through education, maybe he
woud automatically choose a different course of action.
Comptency tests sound good, but determining a fair criteria would be very
difficult.
Jim, I see you "2nd that amendment." So, if I may ask, what is the
difference between me saying, "We must ban all guns to get the murder
rates down." Most murders do occur with guns, hence guns must be the
problem. And you saying "We must mandate hunter orange to reduce
the number of hunter related accidents." I don't see a difference
in logic in those 2 statements, both react to information in the same
manner, by avoiding the real issue.
So I will ask you, how are we going to get the murder rates down in
our cities and towns without mandating the elimination of all guns in
private ownership?
It's a tough question, one that would take much more time and energy
than one could put into a reply...that is where I'm coming from by
not giving you a plan on how to eliminate hunter related accidents.
Both problems have more things in common than we may want to admit to.
This is interesting discussion...
take care...Kevin
|
1098.51 | Hunting is a privilege, not a right | CSC32::J_HENSON | I'll 2nd that amendment! | Thu Dec 19 1991 19:45 | 64 |
| >> <<< Note 1098.50 by BTOVT::REMILLARD_K >>>
>> -< perhaps I rambled some... >-
>> Jim, I see you "2nd that amendment." So, if I may ask, what is the
>> difference between me saying, "We must ban all guns to get the murder
>> rates down." Most murders do occur with guns, hence guns must be the
>> problem. And you saying "We must mandate hunter orange to reduce
>> the number of hunter related accidents." I don't see a difference
>> in logic in those 2 statements, both react to information in the same
>> manner, by avoiding the real issue.
>> So I will ask you, how are we going to get the murder rates down in
>> our cities and towns without mandating the elimination of all guns in
>> private ownership?
>> It's a tough question, one that would take much more time and energy
>> than one could put into a reply...that is where I'm coming from by
>> not giving you a plan on how to eliminate hunter related accidents.
>> Both problems have more things in common than we may want to admit to.
Kevin,
First of all, my name's not Jim. It's Jerry. And you're right, I
do strongly believe in 2nd amendment rights.
As for comparing gun control to mandating HO, that's quite a stretch.
For one thing, the "Right to Keep and Bear Arms" is a right reserved
by the people. Hunting is a privilege. As far as I know, there is
no constitutional provision which makes it a right. This alone
separates mandatory HO and gun control as issues.
Hunting is a privilege which is subject to various state and local
laws. It may seem to be a natural right, but all things considered,
it's a privilege. I do believe that mandatory HO combined with
mandatory hunter safety training makes for a safer sport. You are
absolutely right that it's the responsiblity of each and every person
who picks up a firearm to unmistakenly identify his/her target before
even taking aim, but there's some who just aren't gonna do it, regardless
of what laws are on the books. That's why I'm in favor of mandatory
hunter safety training. Hell, I'd been hunting for over 25 years
when I took the course, and I learned a lot. And having to wear
HO is a small price to pay to be able to continue enjoying our
sport. I just don't see it as an infringement on our rights. Maybe
we'll just have to agree to disagree on this one.
It's kind of like having to wear seat belts. I don't particularly
care for the law, but I obey it. And, it saves lives. There are
still people who get killed with their seat belts on, and I'm
sure that there have been cases where wearing a seat belt increased
the risk. Is it an infringement on our rights? I don't think so,
because driving isn't a right.
I'd recommend to all the readers in this conference that you jump
on over to the SOAPBOX conference and check the Sport Hunting
topic. I know that many of you already do that, and that you
participate. The folks over there who oppose hunting are jiffy
quick to stereotype hunters based on one or two isolated incidences.
The more we do to reduce the number of these incidences, the less
ammunition we give them. Heck, let's not help 'em out.
I guess that's about enough rambling for now. Like you said, it's
an interesting topic.
Jerry (Jim's the muppet guy. Unfortunately, no relation).
|
1098.52 | well it is in VT... | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Fri Dec 20 1991 08:21 | 24 |
|
Sorry Jerry on getting your name wrong...it was a long day yesterday.
You pulled a technicalitiy on me. But let me point out, the pro gun
control crowd does not agree with you on the interpretation of the
2nd amendment...I'm sure you've talked with enough of them to know they
feel it's for the military only, etc.
So I still submit the logic is very similar. Believe me I see where
you are coming from with the mandating of HO, but I feel it's the same
as mandating a waiting period...heck it could save lives...if that's
the case why not agree with that logic as well. I'm just trying to
use examples you are quite aware of to show my point, there is a
similarity in the logic between mandating HO and gun control, and many
other issues in which society comes up with a cure-all for the symptom
but does not address the real problem.
By the way the VT constitution gurantees its citizens the RIGHT to
hunt, fish, and fowl...so I guess that technically makes hunting a
right in this state.
again excuse my name swapping....
Kevin
|
1098.53 | round 2 | CSC32::J_HENSON | I'll 2nd that amendment! | Fri Dec 20 1991 12:47 | 76 |
| >> <<< Note 1098.52 by BTOVT::REMILLARD_K >>>
>> -< well it is in VT... >-
>> You pulled a technicalitiy on me. But let me point out, the pro gun
>> control crowd does not agree with you on the interpretation of the
>> 2nd amendment...I'm sure you've talked with enough of them to know they
>> feel it's for the military only, etc.
I thought that you were asking me how I viewed the two. As I
see it, it boils down to this.
Question: What's the difference between using gun control to
curb violent crime vs. mandating HO to curb hunting accidents?
Answer: In my opinion, there are two major differences.
1) I haven't seen any proof that gun control reduces violent
crime.
2) In my opinion, gun control is an infringement on a
constitutionally guaranteed (U.S. Constitution, that is)
right.
I don't believe that the same can be said for mandating HO.
For one, there is evidence to support the claim that mandating
HO reduces hunting accidents. The Colorado DOW thinks so.
In the Colorado Hunting topic of this conference, I posted
a reply in which the DOW published the "hunter accident"
figures. They are down, and the DOW attributes it largely
to mandatory HO and mandatory hunter safety training.
As for mandating HO being an infringement on a right, I'll
stick by what I have already stated. I'll address the VT.
constitution further down.
>> So I still submit the logic is very similar. Believe me I see where
>> you are coming from with the mandating of HO, but I feel it's the same
>> as mandating a waiting period...heck it could save lives...if that's
It could also cost lives. Most people in the pro-gun camp don't
buy this premise. Two questions for you. 1) Do you think that
a waiting period will save lives? And 2) Do you think that
mandatory HO saves lives?
>> By the way the VT constitution gurantees its citizens the RIGHT to
>> hunt, fish, and fowl...so I guess that technically makes hunting a
>> right in this state.
I wasn't aware of this. I'm curious as to what this really means,
though. For example, even though VT recongnizes this as a right,
the state still reserves the right to restrict one's ability
to exercise this right. For example, you have to purchase a
mandatory hunting license to exercise this right. You can
only exercise your right during the times (seasons/hunting hours)
set forth by the state. When you exercise your right to hunt
waterfowl in VT, you still have to plug your magazine so that
you only have a 3 shot capacity, and you have to use steel
shot (I'm guessing on this).
If you don't buy any of the above, how about this. Is it legal
in VT to carry loaded gun in your vehicle during hunting season?
If it isn't, would you oppose such a law? Why or why not?
This and mandatory HO are both safety related issues, and
both are placing a restriction on how you exercise your right
to hunt. Also, where do you stand on mandatory hunter safety?
Why?
So, I'll stick to my original position. In my opinion, mandatory
HO does save lives, and it's not an infringement on a right.
I'll agree that we already have too danged many laws, but that
doesn't mean that all new laws are bad. If you can't depend
of people to police their participation in this activity
voluntarily, then what choice do you have.
Jerry
|
1098.54 | round X | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Fri Dec 20 1991 15:03 | 136 |
|
Jerry see my comments in **, we're not talking the subject anymore,
so this will be my last reply to this...it's just not going anywhere.
================================================================================
Note 1098.53 Hunter Orange 53 of 53
CSC32::J_HENSON "I'll 2nd that amendment!" 76 lines 20-DEC-1991 10:47
-< round 2 >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> <<< Note 1098.52 by BTOVT::REMILLARD_K >>>
>> -< well it is in VT... >-
>> You pulled a technicalitiy on me. But let me point out, the pro gun
>> control crowd does not agree with you on the interpretation of the
>> 2nd amendment...I'm sure you've talked with enough of them to know they
>> feel it's for the military only, etc.
I thought that you were asking me how I viewed the two. As I
see it, it boils down to this.
Question: What's the difference between using gun control to
curb violent crime vs. mandating HO to curb hunting accidents?
**Jerry, I was trying to draw an analogy, if you don't see that they
**are analogous than my attempt was in vain.
Answer: In my opinion, there are two major differences.
1) I haven't seen any proof that gun control reduces violent
crime.
2) In my opinion, gun control is an infringement on a
constitutionally guaranteed (U.S. Constitution, that is)
right.
I don't believe that the same can be said for mandating HO.
For one, there is evidence to support the claim that mandating
HO reduces hunting accidents. The Colorado DOW thinks so.
In the Colorado Hunting topic of this conference, I posted
a reply in which the DOW published the "hunter accident"
figures. They are down, and the DOW attributes it largely
to mandatory HO and mandatory hunter safety training.
**I'm not pro-gun control. But statistics have been used, and will continue
**to be used that show certain methods of gun control reducing violent crime.
**I didn't intend to argue gun control with you...hey I'm on your side!!!
**But there are 2 sides to every story...and each one is as believable as the
**other.
As for mandating HO being an infringement on a right, I'll
stick by what I have already stated. I'll address the VT.
constitution further down.
**I never said it was an infringement on a right.
>> So I still submit the logic is very similar. Believe me I see where
>> you are coming from with the mandating of HO, but I feel it's the same
>> as mandating a waiting period...heck it could save lives...if that's
It could also cost lives. Most people in the pro-gun camp don't
buy this premise. Two questions for you. 1) Do you think that
a waiting period will save lives? And 2) Do you think that
mandatory HO saves lives?
**1)possibly. 2)possibly. I've seen data to proove both.
>> By the way the VT constitution gurantees its citizens the RIGHT to
>> hunt, fish, and fowl...so I guess that technically makes hunting a
>> right in this state.
I wasn't aware of this. I'm curious as to what this really means,
though. For example, even though VT recongnizes this as a right,
the state still reserves the right to restrict one's ability
to exercise this right. For example, you have to purchase a
mandatory hunting license to exercise this right. You can
only exercise your right during the times (seasons/hunting hours)
set forth by the state. When you exercise your right to hunt
waterfowl in VT, you still have to plug your magazine so that
you only have a 3 shot capacity, and you have to use steel
shot (I'm guessing on this).
**You only have to purchase a license if you hunt on property owned by someone
**other than yourself. But all other laws govern hunting/fishing. I didn't
**mean to get into a debate about the value of the VT constitution. I was
**merely pulling the same technicality on you that you did on me...kinda half
**hearted.
If you don't buy any of the above, how about this. Is it legal
in VT to carry loaded gun in your vehicle during hunting season?
**Yes. Handgun that is.
If it isn't, would you oppose such a law? Why or why not?
This and mandatory HO are both safety related issues, and
both are placing a restriction on how you exercise your right
to hunt. Also, where do you stand on mandatory hunter safety?
Why?
**I believe the law against loaded long guns was more for poaching reasons.
**Just a guess though. I favor mandatory hunter safety, (I've already stated
**why...but), because it is an attempt to get to the root of the problem.
**This latest reply from you totally avoids the problem. You concede that
**responsible behavior is what we should try to attain, but you aren't
**advocating forcing responsible behavior. Before you jump down my back for
**that hear me out...by mandating HO we have given in to the premise that
**hunters are irresponsible, so we all must, according to law, dress up like
**pumpkins to be safe. Ignore the constitutional arguement, because even that
**has its weakness, but I bet you sing the same tune as me for responsible
**behavior when it comes to crimes with guns. Put 'em in jail and throw away
**the key, Purdy should have been in the clinker and all that...so why the
**change in attitude when it comes to forcing a law abiding responsible hunter
**to wear certain color clothing??? Oh...that constitutional argument again...
So, I'll stick to my original position. In my opinion, mandatory
HO does save lives, and it's not an infringement on a right.
I'll agree that we already have too danged many laws, but that
doesn't mean that all new laws are bad. If you can't depend
of people to police their participation in this activity
voluntarily, then what choice do you have.
Jerry
**Yup. And lots of other things could be mandated that would save lives.
**The immediate ban, and removal of all firearms, would save lives...forcing
**auto's to not exceed 20 mph would save lives...living in a bubble would save
**lives...Where do we draw the line between personal freedom and over governing?
**I accept that people die by others irresponsible behaior...it sucks, but it
**happens, it's a result of the world we live in. I still feel that to cure
**the problems we have to change social behavior not mandate laws to attack
**the symptoms.
**Enough...I respectfully disagree with you. Have a nice weekend.
**Kevin
|
1098.55 | | BPO406::LEAHY | | Fri Dec 20 1991 16:18 | 16 |
| I am in agreement with all those that feel that WE as hunters are REQUIRED
to know and identify our targets before raising our weapon of choice. I
personally would not go into the woods during deer season (longgun) w/o
being well visible to all people in the woods at the same time as myself, but
that is my choice. If we are talking mandating HO (name should be changed to
Saftey Orange) who are mandating it too? Hunters, Hikers, Bikers everybody
that wants to go into the woods at the same time as hunters and if so why
just during deer season? There are other times that I would take my rifle
into the woods. IMO it would be another law that is not enforcable and doesn't
address the problem of irresponsible people in our society. One last point
is to distinguish my comments between H/O and Hunter Saftey, I believe
everyone should be made to take a Hunter Safety course.
May the Peace and Love of HIM be with you and yours this Christmas.
Jack
|
1098.56 | still a safe sport | CSC32::J_HENSON | I'll 2nd that amendment! | Fri Dec 20 1991 16:39 | 27 |
| re. the last few.
I guess the Kevin and I (and probably others, as well) can just agree
to disagree. I feel that mandatory HO is a good idea, but it's
certainly not the overriding concern in my life. I sure don't
want to turn this into some sort of crusade. I also like the notion
of stiffer penalties for those who violate the game laws, including
accidental shootings.
I certainly don't want to see this become an issue which pits us
against each other. I can understand why some of you don't like
the mandatory part. I guess that no one likes to be told that they
have to do something. I'll respect your opinions and ask that you
respect mine. I think that that's enough said on Hunter Orange.
There is one thing that I would like to point out, though. And that
is that hunting is still one of the safest sports in the world. When
I was a kid, I remember reading that you have less chance of being
hurt while hunting than you do while driving to the opera (or something
like that). I think that we all need to remind our detractors of
that every now and then. That doesn't lessen the tragedy of
an accidental shooting, but on a percentage basis, we're a pretty
safe bunch of folks.
Enough said. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all.
Jerry
|
1098.57 | One vote against | RANCHR::GIFFORD | When nature calls you have to answer | Mon Dec 23 1991 09:29 | 23 |
| I would imagine that ALL of the "hunters" in this note who are in favor of
MANDATORY HO would have enjoyed living in 1939 Germany. There you were told
what to wear, what to think, which they obviously don't want to do. I'm
sure they are also in favor of MANDATORY helmet laws, MANDATORY seat belt
laws, Hell why not MANDATORY helmet laws for cars and seat belt laws for
motorcycles. If it only saves ONE life it's worth it.
We should be stressing responsibility not legislating it.
I like having my freedom without government interference. They already
control too many things I do. It should be my choice whether or not to
wear HO or SO. If I feel threatened enough that I think it's necessary to
wear it when I go in the woods, that should my choice and not mandated by
some tree hugger that never goes past the paved streets of Boston.
I, also do not believe in "hunting accidents". They are more like negligence
but "most" of them are definitely not accidents. When a "hunter" pulls that
trigger, he/she fully intends to kill whatever is on the receiving end of that
bullet. That to me is not an accident. If what he/she kills is not what he/she
intended, he/she should be brought up on charges of criminal negligence, and
if convicted, should spend a LOT of time in prison.
Cowboy
|
1098.58 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | World leader pretend | Mon Dec 23 1991 09:56 | 9 |
| <<< Note 1098.57 by RANCHR::GIFFORD "When nature calls you have to answer" >>>
-< One vote against >-
>I would imagine that ALL of the "hunters" in this note who are in favor of
>MANDATORY HO would have enjoyed living in 1939 Germany.
Give me a freakin' break.
Mark.
|
1098.59 | | SALEM::ALLORE | All I want is ONE shot..well maybe 2 | Mon Dec 23 1991 12:46 | 1 |
| Ditto what Mark said..............
|
1098.60 | | GIAMEM::J_AMBERSON | | Mon Dec 23 1991 13:40 | 3 |
| Last two, Amen!
Jeff
|
1098.61 | "Me three!!!!" | XCUSME::MALONE | the melon man | Mon Dec 23 1991 15:39 | 1 |
|
|
1098.62 | | LUDWIG::SADIN | does it hurt to bend like that? | Mon Dec 23 1991 23:33 | 16 |
|
I have to agree that maybe the "enjoyed living in 1939 Germany"
statement was a bit overzealous, but I can see the point. I feel that
it's not the governments job/responsibility to look out for my/anyone
elses safety. It I feel that there is reason to wear HO, then I wear
it. If not, then no. Personally, I feel HO is a great idea, but I don't
want it forced on me. I wear a helmet when I ride my motorcycle too,
but I hate the fact that I'm forced to wear it (when I ride into New
Hampshire, I'll take my helmet off for just a bit so I can thumb my
nose at Massachusetts! :)).
I'd gladly support ad campaigns, publicity about HO, and anything
else to try and convince folks to wear it, but I won't support
mandatory laws (even though Mass already has them!).
jim s.
|
1098.63 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A Day at the Races | Tue Dec 24 1991 11:00 | 5 |
| > I'd gladly support ad campaigns, publicity about HO, and anything
> else to try and convince folks to wear it, but I won't support
> mandatory laws (even though Mass already has them!).
Hear, here!
|
1098.64 | :^) | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | World leader pretend | Tue Dec 24 1991 12:18 | 8 |
| <<< Note 1098.63 by WAHOO::LEVESQUE "A Day at the Races" >>>
> Hear, here!
Wear, where?
|
1098.65 | | CSC32::J_HENSON | I'll 2nd that amendment! | Tue Dec 24 1991 12:21 | 11 |
| >> <<< Note 1098.64 by CARROL::LEFEBVRE "World leader pretend" >>>
>> -< :^) >-
>>
>> <<< Note 1098.63 by WAHOO::LEVESQUE "A Day at the Races" >>>
>> Hear, here!
>>> Wear, where?
Their, there!
|
1098.66 | 1939 germany is a little much | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Tue Dec 24 1991 12:23 | 13 |
| I think Jim said it pretty well...
I don't like the mandatory HO
I will wear it whenever i think it's necessary, and being non-mandatory
it allows me to remove it legally when i reach my stand... (hang it on a
tree or branch where i'm sitting)
I don't like mandatory anything, it's just another way for big brother
to keep us supressed. Besides I still contend that the color shouldn't
make a difference in whether or not theres an accident. period
Fra
|
1098.67 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A Day at the Races | Tue Dec 24 1991 13:45 | 17 |
| > Besides I still contend that the color shouldn't
> make a difference in whether or not theres an accident.
I agree with that, with one caveat. Orange makes the "in the line of fire"
accidents less likely. Who among us wouldn't take a shot at a walking 12
pointer 100 yards away standing on the edge of a hemlock stand? You may
not really be able to tell what's on the other side of the hemlocks. If there's
a bowhunter in there, in camo, you may not see him. If he's wearing orange,
you stand a much better chance of seeing him and declining to shoot. All it
takes is one branch to deflect the bullet or one twitch when pulling the trigger
to cause a miss. And it could have disasterous consequences.
I believe that people who shoot others "mistaking them for game" are almost
universally at fault. People who shoot at a deer and miss and hit someone
else may or may not be at fault, depending on the circumstances.
The Doctah
|
1098.68 | | SKIVT::WENER | | Tue Dec 24 1991 13:55 | 14 |
| re:
Doctah, Does this type of accident happen?? Just curious -
it seems that all the accidents I've ever heard of involve someone
that was either mistaken for a deer, or self inflicted. Your backstop
is important, indeed, but something like that is gotta be a once in a
trillion...
Now... lets take a poll - of those responding mandatory Hunter
orange - how many of you hunt in Mass and southern N.H. where
hunter density is extremely high? In places like northern Maine,
N.H., or northern V.T., I would imagine the scenerio mentioned in -.1
would happen once every 10,000 years.
my .02 worth - Rob
|
1098.69 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A Day at the Races | Tue Dec 24 1991 14:21 | 34 |
| >Doctah, Does this type of accident happen??
yeah, one happened like that last year. Here's the abstract from the 1990
hunting accident summary for NH.
"1. Shooter: 44 yeard old male
Victim: 20 year old male
Firearm: .30-30 rifle
A father and son were hunting deer together. The shooter took a stand while
his son tracked deer in fresh snow. The shooter identified a buck and fired
two shots at the running deer. The victim, who was out of sight of the shooter,
was struck in the hip. He was positioned in relatively thick, snow-laden
cover approximately 190 feet from the shooter. The victim wore no hunter orange
clothing."
To me, this is clearly an accident. I believe that the shooter has suffered
enough simply by striking another human being with an errant round, much less
striking his own son. I don't know whether hunter orange would have prevented
this accident or not. But these types of accidents occur.
Another one:
"3. Shooter: unknown
Victim: 36 year old male
Firearm: shotgun
The victim was hunting alone for woodcock. he was struck by one, #7 lead
pellet in the center of the forehead. The victim was 'out of sight of shooter',
who was never identified. The victim wore no hunter orange clothing."
That makes 20% of last year's accidents in NH.
The Doctah
|
1098.70 | it does happen (even with S O sometimes) | USRCV2::GEIBELL | KING FISHING ON LAKE ONTARIO | Tue Dec 24 1991 14:33 | 36 |
| RE last couple
Doctah; thats been my issue with orange over this whole S O debate
your eyes are sure gonna pick out orange before a semi camo color!!!
I am know that people have been shot in Pa when someone else has been
shooting at a deer, even though Pa has manditory S O laws, there are
still a number of people that dont wear it.
Where hunting pressure is high there are bound to be accidents or
whatever you want to call it. for example how many of you have ever
been in Pa the first day of buck season or doe season? at times it
litterly sounds like a war going on. when you get that many people and
that many shots from all different kinds of high power rifles things
will happen!
On the other hand I almost got shot last year in Pa during the doe
season, I was right in the open woods the other 2 guys were dragging a
deer when 4 deer ran between us I knew I couldnt shoot but they didnt
care and let me tell ya, you aint been scared sh*tless till you have
bark flying off the tree your stading behind!! well those guys got an
earfull from me I told them that if they need a deer that bad then you
should go out and shoot one illegal at least then you wont be putting
someone else in danger, or you had better wise up about where you are
shooting.
I for one will always wear S O while hunting or even walking in the
woods during firearm seasons.
PS: may each of you have a safe and happy holiday
Lee
Who hopes his gift is under his treestand 12/26/91
|
1098.71 | 1:10,0000 | PARVAX::TIHIN | | Thu Dec 26 1991 11:03 | 31 |
| > N.H., or northern V.T., I would imagine the scenerio mentioned in -.1
> would happen once every 10,000 years.
Here is one in 10,000 years. I have two stands. A Oscala ladder near the house a
and a permanent one further in the woods. The last weekend of deer season I
decided to use the stand that was further in the woods. Didn't see a thing.
On my way back I started to take the ladder stand down. I have it wedged in a
fork of a tree. I see one of my straps is torn. Further examination reveals a
tip of the bullet sticking out of the tree and through the strap. I dug out the
bullet (.30 cal full metal jacket). Tried to figure out how the bullet got
there... no entry hole on the opposite side of tree. After few minutes finally
put things together. Someone fired (at a deer??) into my field, either
from the road or from woods near the road. They fired up the hill and missed.
Bullet traveled accross the field and 50 yards through the woods. Struck one
of the forks of the tree (blasted out a chunk of its side) became unstable (it
seems to have struck the other fork sideways),
hit the other fork, ripped my strap and came to a rest with about 1/8" of
the tip sticking out of the tree. Considering the size of the platform on the
stand and the path of the bullet, I figure if I had been in the stand that
morning I would be -1 head. So here are some conclusions from this incident:
Full metal jacket bullets do not break up in the woods the way soft points
do. This bullet hit at least two trees and the only marks on it were from the
rifling. I could have used it to reload, it was that perfect.
Some slobs will do anything for a deer including shooting into a fenced in
field (also fired less the 500 ft from the house which is against state law).
They have complete disregard for people and property. In this case for animals
as well since this idiot used a full metal jacket bullet.
Backstop is important.
|
1098.72 | I Apologize | RANCHR::GIFFORD | When nature calls you have to answer | Thu Dec 26 1991 11:03 | 20 |
| My apologies for the "1939 Germany" comment, but after reading all of
those replies from hunters/gunowners who would welcome MANDATORY
anything, my short wick burned at turbo speed and I shot off before
making sure of my target. I realize that we all wear HO or SO for the
same reasons. Whether voluntarily or mandated. I wear it, even during
seasons that don't require it, but I hunt in Mass. and things can get a
little crowded around here.
I too would agree with promotion, awareness ads, or any other way of
getting people to wear it, but I will never agree to legislation to
require it. People should be allowed to use their own judgement as to
their own safety. I wear seat belts when I drive, I wear a helmet when
I ride my motorcycle (even if it weren't required by state law I would
wear it). I don't like being told I have to do this but I'd do it
anyway.
Again I apologize for being such an a--, and offending the good hunters
in this notesfile.
Cowboy (Very Red Faced)
|
1098.73 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | World leader pretend | Thu Dec 26 1991 11:39 | 3 |
| No biggie...let's move on.
Mark.
|
1098.74 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Only Nixon can go to China. | Thu Dec 26 1991 12:37 | 33 |
| So far, we have the following 'sides' -
-Those who favor Hunter Orange and want its use made mandatory.
-Those who favor Hunter Orange but want its use optional.
-Those (few radicals like me ;-) ) who think the stuff should be
banned.
I still believe that the HO issue is a side issue - with the real
problem being how to ensure that every shot fired in the woods is
aimed at a proper target, with a proper backstop. I do think that
HO helps. Sometimes. I also think HO creates a sense, in a few
irresponsible types, that 'If you don't see orange, it's OK to shoot.'
I don't know how to ensure that all hunters have a proper sense of
safety in the woods. Education, certainly. Mandatory education? No.
The education that some people most need is a sense of values. They
need to see beyond the actual bagging of a deer to the whole hunt
experience. They need to understand that bagging a deer is not the
whole experience, nor is it so important that safety canever be
compromised. And they are not going to learn that in a classroom.
They will learn it from their fellow hunters. If Dad and Uncle Bob
brag about being a couple of mighty meat-packers, who always get
their deer, who hunt on each others' tags and wink at the illegalities,
then that kid will grow up with one lousy set of values around hunting.
Better he hangs around on street corners, IMHO. The kid who learns
sportmanship from the actions of those around him will be a true
sportsman.
Dana
|
1098.75 | AGAINST MANDATORY SO | MUTT::HAMRICK | The Great White Rabbit ... | Thu Dec 26 1991 13:08 | 14 |
| re: .69
Doctah,
First let me cast my vote against MANDATORY SO.
Question.... In both cases you gave the victim was "out of sight of
shooter". HOW is something you must SEE going to help if you can't see
it because the guy wearing it is out of sight????
If I feel a need I wear it otherwise I don't.
Harvey
|
1098.76 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A Day at the Races | Mon Dec 30 1991 10:48 | 14 |
| > Question.... In both cases you gave the victim was "out of sight of
> shooter". HOW is something you must SEE going to help if you can't see
> it because the guy wearing it is out of sight????
It depends on how you define out of sight. If you define out of sight as
being "there was no direct line of sight between the principals" then it
doesn't make a difference. If you define out of sight as being "I didn't
see him in that thick stuff" then having orange on may help. There are lots
of times that I've known exactly where my partner was only because he was
wearing orange. Had he worn camo he certainly would have been out of sight,
even though there would have been a direct path which a bullet could take
between he and me.
The Doctah
|
1098.77 | always why is blaze camo not legal??? | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Mon Dec 30 1991 13:26 | 10 |
| in all this talk about hunter orange, it seems that when people argue
HO's merits it's always compared to camo... re:.76 is it that much
better than red plaid?
You mean to tell me you can't pick out red plaid in the thick stuff...
or someone wearing red wool pants... is HO that much better than
RED... come on...
Fra
|
1098.78 | It's that much better ! | CSC32::WATERS | The Agony of Delete | Mon Dec 30 1991 13:49 | 14 |
| re: -1
Hunting out here in the Rockies you can see HO along way off, we're
talking about a mile off. I don't think I'd see you in red plaid and
that same distance. Seeing you out there in HO would determine if I'd
take a shot or not. There is allot of difference IMHO.
This does not deal with HO, but a hunter from La. was shot and killed
this year in Colorado 1/2 mile away from the guy that shot. The guy
that shot was shooting at an elk walking a ridge line and missed.
I'll wear mine.
Mark
|
1098.79 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | World Leader Pretend | Mon Dec 30 1991 13:49 | 7 |
| > You mean to tell me you can't pick out red plaid in the thick stuff...
> or someone wearing red wool pants... is HO that much better than
> RED... come on...
Absolutely. Particularly during early morning or late afternoon light.
Mark.
|
1098.80 | HO/SO *does* glow, unlike red, etc. | HYEND::POPIENIUCK | | Mon Dec 30 1991 14:27 | 33 |
| Last few.
Anyone can argue (and will ;^) whether HO or SO should be mandatory or
not. Also, I doubt that anyone would argue that hunter safety
programs DO make hunting a safer sport. (Although I'm also sure there
are those that in one breath say Big Brother legislates too much, such
as mandatory HO/SO and then want mandatory hunter safety courses in the
next breath. Oh well.)
However I would contend that it's difficult to argue that HO/SO is
significantly more visible than any other color. Many times my brother
and I have walked into the woods pre-dawn and up to a point, no color
is visible whether it's HO/SO, red, or any other color. But as soon as
there gets to be a certain amount of light in the air (roughly 1/2 hour
before actual sunrise time), the HO/SO literally starts to glow, almost
like someone flipped a switch. I'm sure it's some natually excited
wave length of the orange color (which is specified in the regs.) that
our eyes are sensive to, but whatever the cause, this phenomenon does
occur. On a cloudy morning it happens a bit later; on a clear day, a
bit earlier. I've never seen this happen with reds, greens, or any
other colors. And that brilliant orange glow can't easily be mistaken
to be anything but a hunter; unlike red which could be a patch of
leaves.
Nothing will replace common sense and making sure of one's target and
backstop BEFORE raising the rifle. I'm also equally sure that wearing
HO/SO makes me more visible to game (whether by color, noticed
movement, or by being a solid colorless blob to the animal's eyes).
But if you're like me, the one sure thing I can do to protect myself
(at least to some extent) against the careless hunters and also some
number of freak accidents so I can hunt again another day is to wear
the HO/SO. Anyone who doesn't; more power to you and you have chosen
to accept an increased risk that I don't.
|
1098.81 | Orange shows faster than red | CHRLIE::HUSTON | | Mon Dec 30 1991 15:02 | 14 |
|
re .77
I believe hunter orange shows up much better than red/red plaid.
In the group I hunt with (NH), the range of clothes goes from
all orange (including pants) to all red with the exception of a
hat. Several times I have seen a little orange dot coming through
the woods, and upon closer look you see the red. THis has occured
at distances while on a stand and also while still hunting with a
partner who is in head to toe read with an orange hat. When working
in thick stuff the very first thing you see is the orange.
--Bob
|
1098.82 | | WLW::KIER | My grandsons are the NRA! | Mon Dec 30 1991 16:35 | 14 |
| I believe HO works much the same as other flourescent products
(such as the Day-Glo tradename products) in that it not only
reflects the normal amount of visible light (just like a red
flannel jacket would) but also absorbs normally invisible
ultraviolet and re-emits it in the visible spectrum. This would
also explain why it seems to `turn on' at dawn since prior to the
first sun's rays bending around the horizon, there is negligible
ultraviolet light available. So the net result is that in
sunlight (or any other source that has a good UV component) HO
really IS brighter than normal fabrics. Supposedly, even though
it is brighter, it is still far enough into the red end of the
spectrum to not be appreciably noticeable by deer.
Mike
|
1098.83 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A Day at the Races | Mon Dec 30 1991 17:19 | 6 |
| > You mean to tell me you can't pick out red plaid in the thick stuff...
> or someone wearing red wool pants... is HO that much better than
> RED... come on...
Red plaid looks awfully brownish in the same low light conditions in which
orange still looks orange, at least through my eyes.
|
1098.84 | NO MANDATORY SO | MUTT::HAMRICK | The Great White Rabbit ... | Tue Dec 31 1991 12:14 | 14 |
|
One reason why some can't see the red plaid as well--- According to
a medical study about 30% of males and 20% fo females are red-green
color blind. Most do not know it. This is why red requires direct
light for some to see it. And if you have this condition, which ranges
from minimal to seeing NO RED, the worst color combination for you
to distinguish is a combination of RED and GREEN. It affects some
people strongly enough that they CANNOT see blood on a blade of grass.
Just thought I'd throw out that little bit of trivia. Some places I
hunt require SO, then I wear it. I am not for MANDATORY SO but use it
when I think it is warranted.
Enough ramblin'
Harvey
|
1098.85 | | GENRAL::WADE | LuFay. Ex-RON? Film at 11... | Tue Dec 31 1991 13:48 | 11 |
|
Regardless of what some of us think, hunting is a privilege
and not a right.
Now, as to whether HO should be mandatory or not, I think
it should. My reasoning is for the line of fire reason given
earlier. Also, HO helps me detect what is walking through
the woods (ie I get my butt on the opposite side of a tree if
I identify another hunter cruising through the woods :*) ).
Clay
|
1098.86 | Mandatory - NO but the SMART CHOICE says wear it | CXCAD::COLECCHI | | Tue Dec 31 1991 13:57 | 40 |
| I'll add my $.02 worth. I don't like Big Brother telling me how to live.
What ever happened to freedom of CHOICE. If some fool wants to ride around
on his motorcycle doing 100 MPH and wrecks, That's his choice on whether or not
he wants his head sanded smooth on one side by the pavement. Same way with HO.
I wear it and I'll always wear it even though its required here in CO. If 1% of
the hunters out there shot at sounds rather than Identifing the target do you
really want to take the chance of being his with a bullet from a high powered
rifle? You only have control of your own situation. You have no or very little
control over other peoples situations. I don't shoot at sounds, most hunters
don't either, But what about the tiny % of those who are SLOBS. Why take this
unnecessary risk. Hunter orange may increase your chances of not getting shot.
Then there is the argument about deer see the orange and react to it. This is
bull. I have been 20 feet from a 2 point buck(western) that had a herd of about
12-15 does with him. We were standing out in the open where he could see me
from the time he walked into thew meadow. First the does came into the meadow
then the buck. If the does would have seen the orange they definitely would
have warned the buck. The buck walks past the does to about 20 feet away. And
stops and bends over to graze. The ground was covered in snow. Me and my HO
stuck out like a sore thumb. The deer didn't bolt until I shued it away. Need
3 points that year to shoot it. I even raised my rifle slowly and had him in my
sights. There is NO proof that will convince me that deer react to HO. Movement
yes, scent - yes, color - NO.
How would you feel if you see a buck 50 yds away along the tree line. You check
it out with your 10X binos and see nothing behind him but dark timber. Its 4:30
pm. You raise your 300 win mag and fire. The bullet goes clean thru the deer
and into the woods. You hear a scream and walk up to investigate; there 20 feet
into the trees is a fully camo'd hunter laying there with a bullety wound in
his chest. Now, how many of you would have passed up the shot? If you truly
live by the rule that KNOW YOUR BACKSTOP. How can you ever shoot at anything
that doesn't have a BIG rock or mountain directly behind it?
HO could have saved this man's life. That's why I wear HO. I don't want to get
shot by some beer guzzling slob hunter and I've seen some here in COLO that
down right scare me.
Let the choice be yours but I think the smart choice is HO.
JC
|
1098.87 | | GIAMEM::J_AMBERSON | | Tue Dec 31 1991 15:00 | 4 |
| JC brings up a good point that I've often wondered about. How many
folks _truely_ know what is behind there target?
Jeff
|
1098.88 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A Day at the Races | Tue Dec 31 1991 15:03 | 3 |
| Good point. If you were to take a really strict interpretation of the
"know your target and your backstop," I'd bet that fewer than 10% of the shots
now taken would qualify.
|
1098.89 | it's not a cure all | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Tue Dec 31 1991 15:21 | 14 |
| re:.86 again the non-wearer of hunter orange is wearing camo... I may
be way off base but I truly find it hard to believe that someone
wearing red plaid wouldn't be seen... Having said that i'll stop
rambling...
in the situation described where the hunter in the background was shot
by a "stray" bullet, this could happen under many different
situations... running shots, any flat terrain, anything where there
isn't a hill behind the target for a backstop... How many guys out
there have taken shots at skylined deer??? nobody I bet...
mandatory: NO
Fra
|
1098.90 | NO SKYLINE SHOTS | MUTT::HAMRICK | The Great White Rabbit ... | Tue Dec 31 1991 15:49 | 15 |
| re:.89
Fra,
In response to you question at the end of your reply. I DO NOT shoot
skylined deer. As a youngster my Grandfather and father DRUMMED that
into all us boys. You have no idea where the bullet is going even if
you do hit the deer. In 40 years of hunting I've NEVER done it and have
no plans to. But that is my choice. I still don't like mandatory but I
only wear full camo when bow hunting. when rifle hunting I CHOOSE to
wear bright cloths.
nuf' said
Harvey
|
1098.91 | Drive safe | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Tue Dec 31 1991 18:53 | 51 |
| Harvey,
I don't want to come acroos as some kind of nut here, I guess what i'm
really doing mostly is playing the devils advocate... I mean, Ya I
wear HO when necessary, and it's mandatory in Mass. I always have
some portion of HO on even when in VT where it's not needed... at a
minimum I use a strip of it on my day pack (approx 100" sq). Some days
i'll wear a HO hat and on those occasions when were driving areas, i'll
put on a HO vest...
I have a tough time writing down what i'm thinking, but essentially I
guess what i'm trying to say is that target identification is the
issue, not what colors your looking at.
Knowing that theres a chance that there could be a bowhunter sitting
camoed up, on the other side of the deer, does'nt seem to stop people
from shooting deer. People still pull the trigger... there are states
where this could easily happen, but people still continue hunting.
We all know the risks are there, but people continue to shoot running
deer, deer with no hill behind them (probably the only realistic
backstop) and others that shoot skylined deer. I don't shoot skylined
deer, and to be honest I havn't had the opportunity yet to see if I'd
have the will power to hold back, although I hope I could.
It's the type of sport where some very tragic things could and do
happen. I have a wife and kids, and am finding myself more and more
inclined to wear the HO, but don't believe for a minute that it's a
cure all... even with it on theres always the chance of a bullet
knocking on your door... I guess I can count my blessing that nothing
has happened to me so far...
there are other more Bizaar issues at hand than mandatory HO or not,
when it comes to safety... Like in MA, why do you have to hunt with a
shotgun for deer but can use any rifle you want to varmint hunt??? Now
theres something that should be addressed... wow, forget I said that!!!
I don't want any more restrictions that might interfere with my rifle
hunting and use of the new .220 Swift.
Up until now, my thinking has been "out of sight, out of mind", if a
guy walking by does'nt see me I feel more comfortable, and with the
HO your really advertising... I've had the unfortunate experience of
being scoped out on a few occasions in MA, and hence why I feel the way
I do. Thats not to say I'm out rifle/shotgun hunting in full camo.
This is where the Red Plaid comes in, i think its a pretty good middle
of the road choice. Only now after all the talk I think I might start
wearing a little more of the HO... consider me a convert. ;^)
still don't think it should be mandatory however!
Happy New Year, Fra
|
1098.92 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | Just a word in Mr Churchill's ear | Thu Jan 02 1992 10:43 | 7 |
| > Like in MA, why do you have to hunt with a
> shotgun for deer but can use any rifle you want to varmint hunt???
Fra, it could possibly be due to the larger number of hunters in the
woods during deer season than during varmint season.
Mark.
|
1098.93 | unsafe practices... | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Thu Jan 02 1992 11:14 | 18 |
|
re .91
My feelings exactly concerning advertising...after being scoped myself
I know that feeling...even to this day when I talk to some people about
this they brush it off as not a big deal. I never gave it much thought
either until I realized that barrel was pointed directly at me!!! Low
and behold if that gun went off where would I be now? There's still
people that walk through the woods with their damn safety's off!!!
Two years ago, after the scoping incident, I received some nice Leopold
bino's as a Christmas present from my wife...I asked for them so I
would never be tempted to point my rifle in the direction of something
I wasn't completely sure of...it's a standard I don't compromise on.
I hear ya...
Kevin
|
1098.94 | A redfaced question... | DECALP::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Mon Jan 06 1992 14:26 | 15 |
|
Pardon my ignorance, but if I can learn something important
about safety I guess I had better admit to being stupid...
What is the truble of shooting at a "skylined" target?
I have this picture of a buck above me on a ridge. If
I'm not allowed to shoot at him, is it because my bullet
could be deflected in his body, or is it that ultimately
any bullet has to come down again (i.e. the lack of a
backstop) ?
Sorry to be ignorant.
- Mike
|
1098.95 | | XCUSME::NEWSHAM | I'm the NRA | Mon Jan 06 1992 14:29 | 5 |
| Re: Shooting at a skylined target.
Fisrt rule of thumb....Know your backstop.
Red
|
1098.96 | Bullet has to land someplace | CHRLIE::HUSTON | | Mon Jan 06 1992 15:38 | 14 |
|
re .94
You shouldn't shoot at a skylined target for the basic reason that
.95 says, you don't know your backstop. If you think a little deeper
a couple of things could happen:
1) You miss, bullets goes for miles, has to come down someplace
2) You hit, bullet goes through deer, out the other side, still has
to come down someplace
3) Bullet deflection on the way to deer, see #1
--Bob
|
1098.97 | Stray fire | BPO406::LEAHY | | Mon Jan 06 1992 15:49 | 10 |
| Off the subject of SO but relevant to knowing your backstop. Last
thursday or friday (forgot which) a conference room in AKO1 (Acton,Ma)
got hit with a stray bullet. The police that investigated determined
that the bullet (don't know what caliber) came some distance as it
penertrated the first pane of the thermal pane and did'nt go thru
the second. Someone either skylined shot or did'nt know thier backstop.
(I don't think it was part of our downsizing)
Jack
|
1098.98 | | PEAKS::OAKEY | Save the Bill of Rights-Defend the II | Mon Jan 06 1992 16:52 | 11 |
| Re: <<< Note 1098.97 by BPO406::LEAHY >>>
>> Off the subject of SO but relevant to knowing your backstop. Last
>> thursday or friday (forgot which) a conference room in AKO1 (Acton,Ma)
>> got hit with a stray bullet. The police that investigated determined
>> that the bullet (don't know what caliber) came some distance as it
>> penertrated the first pane of the thermal pane and did'nt go thru
>> the second. Someone either skylined shot or did'nt know thier backstop.
Was the bullet distorted? If not, it was probably a direct shot from a long
ways off. If it was, it may have been a fairly close ricochet.
|
1098.99 | man killed from 1/2 mile away | CXCAD::COLECCHI | | Tue Jan 07 1992 14:08 | 6 |
| I remember reading that someone was killed from a bullet fired ~1/2 mile away.
I don't recall where it happened. might have been here in Colo. Probably from a
skyline shot that missed. So it does happen. Anyone else recall reading about
this.
JC
|
1098.100 | | APHE::BULLARD | | Tue Jan 07 1992 14:27 | 8 |
| re: .99
Yer correct. The man was a hunter (Lousiana police officer) who
got hit from a person taking a skyline shot at an elk a 1/2 a
mile away. Man, talk about occupying the wrong space at the wrong
time. The odds are probably incredible, but not to this man. Never
shoot unless you know your backstop!
chuck
|
1098.101 | Red can be dangerous | CSC32::J_HENSON | TP, or not TP? | Thu Jan 09 1992 15:52 | 19 |
| There was a question posted earlier about the safety factor of red
vs. orange. I just remembered something from my hunter safety course.
During the course, a film was shown which recreated some actual, reported
accidents. In one such incident, a guy was turkey hunting. He was
calling, and had a red bandana/handkerchief which he was wiping his
face with.
Another hunter heard his calls and started working toward him, thinking
that he was hearing a turkey. As he neared, the caller wiped his
face with the red bandana. The other hunter saw the red, mistook it
for a turkey's wattle (or whatever you call that hangy-down red part
under a gobbler's beak), and shot him.
Of course, the guy doing the shooting was wrong. He should never have
shot regardless of what color he saw. However, in at least one
situation, red was a very un-safe color.
Jerry
|
1098.102 | | DECWET::HELSEL | Legitimate sporting purpose | Fri Jan 10 1992 14:09 | 16 |
| Yea, I saw that film too. That was pretty stupid of the guy but I'm
sure he didn't think of it at the time. On the other hand, not many
toms make hen calls......
I think one problem with red, especially in the NE is that the swamp
mapels turn great colors of red and red could blend right in with the
trees. How many more people would get shot from movement detected from
other "hunters" with a doe tag.
Hunters orange is *not* a color of nature (not in my neck of the woods
anyway) and I think that's why they picked it. I've often wondered
if flourescent green, blues etc would be just as effective, but they've
got everybody looking for orange so I guess why change it.
/brett
picked it
|
1098.103 | AKO Shooting | BPO406::LEAHY | | Fri Jan 10 1992 17:12 | 11 |
| RE: <<1098.98 PEAKS::OAKEY>>
I'm not sure about bullet deformity as I didnt see it, I am pretty sure though
that the police investigating felt it came from a distance.
RE: <<1098.101>>
If I remember correctly during my safety course that they used the tragedy
you mentioned as one of the main reasons that you DO NOT stalk turkeys.
Jack
|
1098.104 | Swamp Maples. the earliest tree to shed its leaves | ZEKE::HOLLEN | | Fri Jan 10 1992 20:10 | 11 |
| re .101
Usually the leaves are gone from the swamp maples by the last week in
September/1st week in October. There are other trees that turn red,
though not nearly as brilliant as the ole "swamp maple"... So, it might
not be a significant factor in someone "blending in" with the
background while wearing a red suit :-)
Gotta love those fall colors...
Joe
|
1098.105 | WARNING DECWINDOWS USERS | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Sat Jul 18 1992 01:10 | 4 |
| WARNING DECWINDOWS USERS
The next reply is very long. It contains the regulations for the US
and Canada concerning Hunter Orange as of 1991.
|
1098.106 | US and Canadian Hunter Orange Regs | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Sat Jul 18 1992 01:14 | 418 |
| This is taken from a pamphlet printed in 1991 by Highland Industries,
Inc. They make hunter orange fabrics. It covers both the U.S. and
Canada.
NOTE: I am putting section II before section I. This is because section
II is a summary, thereby making it shorter.
"HUNTER ORANGE" THE LAWS OF THE LAND
Hunter Orange Survey
II. A summary of information obtained from the United States and
Canadian Hunter Safety Coordinators.
A. Recommended Hunter Orange although use is not required by law.
United States Canada
------------- ------
ALASKA NEWFOUNDLAND
ARIZONA NORTHWEST TERRITORY
CALIFORNIA ONTARIO
IDAHO PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
NEVADA
NEW HAMPSHIRE
NEW MEXICO
NEW YORK
OREGON
VERMONT
B. Prohibit Camouflage Hunter Orange
1. Require garment to be of SOLID or CONTINUOUS Hunter Orange
per state and province regulations.
United States Canada
------------- ------
ALABAMA NOVA SCOTIA
COLORADO
ILLINOIS
INDIANA
IOWA
MAINE
MISSISSIPPI
RHODE ISLAND
SOUTH CAROLINA
2. Refuse to recognize Camouflage Hunter Orange as a legal fabric
as advised by the State and Provincial Hunter Safety
Coordinators.
United States Canada
------------- ------
FLORIDA QUEBEC
KENTUCKY SASKATCHEWAN
LOUISIANA
MARYLAND
MISSOURI
NEBRASKA
NORTH DAKOTA
VIRGINIA
C. Require Camouflage Hunter Orange to meet or exceed their requirements.
Taken from survey responses of State and Provincial Hunter Safety
Coordinators.
United States Canada
------------- ------
ARKANSAS NEW BRUNSWICK
DELAWARE
GEORGIA
KANSAS
MASSACHUSETTS
MONTANA
NEW JERSEY
OKLAHOMA
PENNSYLVANIA
TEXAS
TENNESSEE
UTAH
WASHINGTON
WEST VIRGINIA
WYOMING
NOTE: MICHIGAN, MINNESOTA, and WISCONSIN require 50% of a Camouflage
Hunter Orange garment be open Hunter Orange.
NOVA SCOTIA refuses to recognize Camouflage Hunter Orange as a
legal fabric except during archery deer season.
========================================================================
I. A review of current regulations and recommendations compiled by
Highland Industries, Inc., producers of Ten Mile Cloth (R) and Easy
Ten (R) fabrics for hunting garments.
U N I T E D S T A T E S
ALABAMA All hunters during gun deer season must wear a vest or cap
with at least 144 square inches of SOLID Hunter Orange, visible from
all sides. Deer hunters in tree stands elevated more than 12 feet
from the ground need not wear Hunter Orange, except when traveling to
and from tree stands. Only Hunter Orange, Blaze Orange or Ten Mile
(R) cloth is legal. (Exception: waterfowl, turkey and dove hunters
and those hunting legally designated species during legal night time
hours.)
ALASKA Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to
wear Hunter Orange.
ARIZONA Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to
wear Hunter Orange.
ARKANSAS All hunters, and those accompanying them, during gun
seasons for deer and bear must wear a Hunter Orange hat and an outer
garment with at least 400 square inches of Hunter Orange above the waist.
(Exception: Waterfowl hunters.)
CALIFORNIA Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to
wear Hunter Orange.
COLORADO All firearm hunters for elk, deer, antelope, or bear must wear
a minimum of 500 square inches of SOLID Hunter Orange above the waist
which includes a head covering.
CONNECTICUT All hunters, from the third Saturday in October through the
last day of December must wear at least 200 square inches of Hunter
Orange, visible from all sides. (Exception: bow hunters, waterfowl
hunters in boats, blinds, or other stationary positions, hunters of
raccoon or opossum at night, landowners hunting deer on their own land,
crow hunters from blinds, archery and firearms, turkey hunting.)
DELAWARE During a time when it is lawful to take deer with a firearm,
any person hunting deer in this State shall display on his head, chest
and back a total of not less than 400 square inches of Hunter Orange
material.
FLORIDA All deer hunters, and those accompanying them, on public land
during open deer season must wear at least 500 square inches of Hunter
Orange on outer garments above the waist.
GEORGIA All deer, bear and feral hog hunters, and those accompanying
them, during firearm seasons must wear at least 500 square inches of
Hunter Orange on outer garments above the waist.
HAWAII All persons in any hunting area where firearms are permitted must
wear a Hunter Orange outer garment above the waist, or a piece of Hunter
Orange material of at least 144 square inches on both their front and
back, above the waist. A SOLID Hunter Orange hat is recommended.
IDAHO Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to
wear Hunter Orange.
ILLINOIS All hunters and trappers during gun deer season must wear a cap
and outer garment above the waist with at least 400 square inches of
SOLID Hunter Orange (Exception: migratory waterfowl hunters.)
INDIANA Deer (bow and gun), rabbit, squirrel, grouse, pheasant, and
quail hunters must wear at least one of the following SOLID Hunter Orange
garments: vest, coat, jacket, coveralls, hat or cap. (Exception: bow
hunters for deer during first archery deer season.)
IOWA All firearm deer hunters must wear at least one or more of the
following articles of visible EXTERNAL apparel: A vest, coat, jacket,
sweatshirt, sweater, shirt, or coveralls, the color of which shall be
SOLID Hunter Orange.
KANSAS Big game clothing requirements: (a) Each person hunting deer or
elk in a management unit during a firearms deer or elk season shall wear
Hunter Orange clothing having a predominant lightwave length of 595-605
nanometers; (B) The bright orange color shall be worn as follows: 1) a
hat with the exterior of not less than 50 percent of the bright orange
color, an equal portion of which is visible from all directions; 2) a
minimum of 100 square inches of the bright orange color on the front of
the torso; and 3) a minimum of 100 square inches of the bright orange
color on the back of the torso.
KENTUCKY All deer hunters (including archers) during any gun season, or
any hunt where firearms are permitted, must wear SOLID, unbroken, Hunter
Orange color on their head, chest and back as outer garments. These
SOLID Hunter Orange garments may have a small patch or panel of another
color, so long as the Hunter Orange is not significantly obscured.
LOUISIANA All hunters, including archers and small game hunters, on
Wildlife Management Areas and all deer hunters elsewhere must wear at
least 400 square inches of Hunter Orange on the head, chest or back.
(Exception: bow hunters when no gun deer season is in progress, and
hunters on privately owned and legally posted land.)
MAINE All firearm hunters during open gun deer seasons must wear an
article of SOLID Hunter Orange clothing visible from all sides. Camouflage
Hunter Orange must be supplemented with an article of SOLID Hunter
Orange. (Exception: waterfowl hunters from a boat, blind, or in
conjunction with decoys.)
MARYLAND All hunters and those accompanying them must wear either: 1) a
cap of SOLID daylight fluorescent orange color; 2) a vest or jacket
containing back and front panels of at least 250 square inches of SOLID
daylight fluorescent orange color; or 3) an outer garment of camouflage
fluorescent orange worn above the waist which contains at least 50%
daylight fluorescent orange color. (Exception: Hunters of wetland game
birds, fur bearing mammals, doves, crows, wild turkeys, bow hunters
during archery season only, falconers, and unlicensed hunters on their
own property.)
MASSACHUSETTS All hunters during shotgun deer season and deer hunters
during primitive firearm season must wear at least 500 square inches of
Hunter Orange on their chest, back, and head. (Exception: waterfowl
hunters in a blind or boat.) All hunters on Wildlife Management Areas
during pheasant and quail season must wear a Hunter Orange hat or cap.
(Exception: waterfowl hunters in a blind or boat, and raccoon hunters at
night.)
MICHIGAN All firearm hunters on any land during daylight hunting hours
must wear a hat, cap, vest, jacket, rainwear, or other outer garment of
Hunter Orange visible from all sides. All Camouflage Hunter Orange is
legal provided 50% of the surface are is SOLID Hunter Orange.
(Exception: waterfowl, crow, and wild turkey hunters, and bow hunters for
deer during open archery season.)
MINNESOTA A person may not hunt or trap during the open season in a zone
or area where deer may be taken by firearms, unless the visible portion
of the person's cap and outer clothing above the waist, excluding sleeves
and gloves, is bright red or blaze orange. Blaze orange includes a
camouflage pattern of at least 50% blaze orange within each square foot.
MISSISSIPPI All deer hunters during gun season for deer must wear at
least 500 square inches of SOLID Hunter Orange visible from all sides.
MISSOURI During firearms deer season, all hunters must wear a cap or
hat, and a shirt, vest, or coat having the outermost color be Hunter
Orange and must be plainly visible from all sides while being worn.
Camouflage orange garments do not meet this requirement. (Exception:
Department of Conservation areas where deer hunting is restricted to
archery methods.)
MONTANA All big game hunters and those accompanying them must wear at
least 400 square inches of Hunter Orange above the waist. A hat or cap
alone is not sufficient. (Exception: bow hunters during special archery
season.)
NEBRASKA All deer and antelope hunters with firearms must wear at least
400 square inches of Hunter Orange on the head, back, and chest.
NEVADA Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to wear
Hunter Orange.
NEW HAMPSHIRE Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to
wear Hunter Orange.
NEW JERSEY All hunters with firearms for deer, rabbit, hare, squirrel,
fox or game birds must wear a cap of SOLID Hunter Orange or other outer
garment with at least 200 square inches of Hunter Orange visible from all
sides. (Exception: waterfowl, wild turkey and bow hunters.)
NEW MEXICO Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to
wear Hunter Orange.
NEW YORK Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to wear
Hunter Orange.
NORTH CAROLINA Bear, deer or wild boar hunters with the use of firearms
must wear a hat, cap or outer garment of Hunter Orange, visible from all
sides. (Exception: landowners hunting on their own land.)
NORTH DAKOTA All big game hunters with firearms must wear a head
covering and out garment above the waist with at least 400 square inches
of SOLID Hunter Orange material.
OHIO All deer hunters during gun deer seasons must wear a visible Hunter
Orange hat, cap, vest, or coat.
OKLAHOMA All firearm deer hunters must wear a head covering and outer
garment above the waist with at least 500 square inches of clothing of
which 400 square inches must be Hunter Orange. All other hunters must
wear either a head covering or outer garment of Hunter Orange during open
gun deer seasons. (Exception: waterfowl, crow, or crane hunters, and
those hunting furbearing animals at night.)
OREGON Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to wear
Hunter Orange.
PENNSYLVANIA All deer or bear hunters during the regular firearms
seasons must wear at least 250 square inches of Hunter Orange material on
the head, chest and back combined. Woodchuck hunters must wear a SOLID
Hunter Orange head covering.
RHODE ISLAND Statewide, 3rd Saturday in October-February 28, all
hunters, unless bow hunting, hunting raccoon or fox at night and waterfowl
hunting as provided, must wear an outer garment consisting of a minimum
of 200 square inches of SOLID daylight fluorescent Hunter Orange material
worn above the waist, and visible in all directions. This may be a hat
and/or vest. Statewide, during shotgun season for deer, all hunters,
except waterfowl hunters as provided, must wear an outer garment
containing a minimum of 500 square inches of SOLID daylight fluorescent
Hunter Orange material, worn above the waist visible from all directions
and must include a head covering. (Exceptions: during muzzle-loading
season all hunters must wear 200 square inches as stated above.)
SOUTH CAROLINA On all WMA lands and lands within the Central Piedmont,
Western Piedmont and Mountain Hunt Units during the gun hunting season
for deer, all hunters must wear either a hat, coat, or vest of SOLID
visible international orange. Hunters are exempt from this requirement
while hunting for dove, duck and turkey. Small game hunters while
hunting at night or on privately owned lands within the hunt unit are
also exempt.
SOUTH DAKOTA All big game hunters with firearms must wear one or more
exterior Hunter Orange garments above the waist. (Exception: turkey
hunters.)
TENNESSEE All big game hunters with firearms must ware at least 500
square inches of Hunter Orange on a head covering and an outer garment
above the waist, visible from front and back. (Exception: turkey
hunters during gun hunts proclaimed by the commission of those hunting on
their own property.)
TEXAS All hunters on Type I wildlife management areas of state parks
must visibly wear a minimum of 400 square inches of daylight fluorescent
Hunter Orange material with at least 144 square inches appearing on both
chest and back. (Exception: archery-only season; turkey, migratory
birds; coyotes or fur bearers at night; and alligators.) Type II area
regulations are similar.
UTAH All hunters during big game season will wear a minimum of 400
square inches of Hunter Orange material on the head, chest and back.
Hunter Orange clothing is not required during deer and elk archery and
muzzle-loading season except when a rifle season is in progress.
(Exception: bighorn sheep season.)
VERMONT Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to wear
Hunter Orange.
VIRGINIA Hunters during firearm deer season and those accompanying them
must wear Hunter Orange on the upper body, visible from all sides, or a
Hunter Orange hat, or display 100 square inches of Hunter Orange within
body reach, at shoulder level or higher, visible from all sides.
WASHINGTON All hunters must wear fluorescent Hunter Orange clothing with
a minimum of 400 square inches fluorescent Hunter Orange exterior, worn
above the waist and visible from all sides. (Exception: Persons who are
hunting upland game bird during an upland game bird season with
muzzle-loading firearm, bow and arrow or falconry.)
WEST VIRGINIA All deer hunters during deer gun season must wear at least
400 square inches of Hunter Orange on an outer garment.
WISCONSIN All hunter during gun deer season must have 50% of their
outer garments above the waist, including any head covering, colored
Hunter Orange. (Exception: waterfowl hunters.)
WYOMING All big game hunters must wear one or more exterior garments
(i.e. hat, shirt, jacket, coat, vest, or sweater) of Hunter Orange.
(Exception: bow hunters during special archery season.)
C A N A D A
ALBERTA No garment color requirements or recommendations.
BRITISH COLUMBIA No garment color requirements or recommendations.
MANITOBA All big game hunters must wear a head covering of SOLID Hunter
Orange above the waist, visible from all sides. This 400 square inches
can consist of camo. (Exception: archers, registered trappers,
persons hunting black bears and gray wolves, March 1 to June 30, or a
time of year and in an area where hunting season for all other big game
animals is closed. Further exceptions include: bull hunters, wolf
hunters, outside of deer, elk, and moose seasons, and wolf and bear
hunters during spring season, also upland bird hunters need to wear blaze
orange during deer rifle season.)
NEW BRUNSWICK All hunters and licensed guides accompanying any person
engaged in hunting must wear upon his back, chest and shoulders an
exterior garment Hunter Orange in color of which not less than 2,580
square centimeters in aggregate shall be exposed to view to be plainly
visible from all directions.
NEWFOUNDLAND Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to
wear a minimum of 2,580 square centimeters of Hunter Orange (400 square
inches).
NORTHWEST TERRITORY Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended
to wear Hunter Orange.
NOVA SCOTIA All hunters and those accompanying them must wear a cap or
hat and a vest, coat, or shirt of SOLID Hunter Orange visible from all
sides. Camouflage Hunter Orange is permitted during bow hunter season
for deer as long as there are at least 400 square inches visible from all
sides.
ONTARIO Upland and big game hunters are strongly recommended to wear a
minimum of 2,580 square centimeters of Hunter Orange (400 square
inches).
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND All upland game hunters are encouraged to wear
Hunter Orange.
QUEBEC All hunters, guides and companions must wear at least 2,580
square centimeters (400 square inches) of Hunter Orange on their back,
shoulders, and chest, visible from any angle. During hunting season
through December 1st, coyote, fox and wolf hunters and guides are
required to wear the same as other hunters. (Exception: crow, migratory
birds, deer and moose hunters during special archery seasons.)
SASKATCHEWAN All big game hunters must wear a complete outer suit of
scarlet, bright yellow, Hunter Orange or white, and a head covering of
any of these colors except white. (Exception: bow hunters and black
powder hunters during special archery/muzzle-loading seasons.)
YUKON No garment color requirements or recommendations.
|
1098.107 | NEON CHARTREUSE | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | Bowhunters never hold back! | Thu Oct 08 1992 18:48 | 10 |
| I was recently reading somewhere, or heard on some show, that there
is a state that is changing its hunter orange law. They are changing
to using neon Chartreuse this hear , year not hear, for safety colors.
They say the chartreuse is more visible than the orange. Does anyone
have information on this, such as which state is doing this, etc.?
It will be intereseting to see what the "accident" ratio will be after
one year of this.
bob
|
1098.108 | warning other hunters of your presence | VERGA::MARSHALL | Changes overtook the Riders too... | Fri Nov 20 1992 16:56 | 16 |
| On the subject of hunter safety, what do you folks recomend when you
notice another hunter within sight? My scenario is that I'll be sitting
on the ground, near the top of a hill, with full red&black Woolrich on.
Over the coat, I have the typical blaze orange vest. I also wear a
blaze orange cap.
Do you whistle, blow a whistle, holler, cough, wave, or what to let the
approaching hunter know you are there?
With some of the accidents (?) here in NE, I have a bit more concern
about this topic than in past years.
Thanks,
Ed Marshall (headed for PA buck season next week!)
|
1098.109 | | ESKIMO::RINELLA | | Fri Nov 20 1992 16:59 | 7 |
|
I usually give a whistle and when they finally look in my direction
I'll wave to them just to make sure. If they are sincere hunters,
they'll usually walk in the other direction, away from you.
Gus
|
1098.110 | better safe than sorry..... | BTOVT::MORONG | | Mon Nov 23 1992 11:31 | 15 |
| Yep, generally a quick whistle and a wave when they look in your
direction. The same holds true if you are the walker and you see
another hunter posted. This happened to me yesterday... I was walk-
ing through some thick stuff, and saw a hunter down below me. It
was real quite in the woods (rain will do that), and he never saw me
coming. I probably could have snuck by undetected, but didn't want to
take that chance. I stopped in a spot where I could clearly see him,
then whistled (not too loud). He then turned in my direction, I waved,
then proceeded on. Just wanted to make sure he know I was there. I've
read about too many accidents this year... didn't want to take a
chance. A sudden snap of a twig, rustle of the leaves in all that
thick stuff, and you never know what the other guy is thinking. Don't
want any sound shots headed in my direction.
-Ron-
|
1098.111 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Wild Mountain Thunder | Mon Dec 07 1992 11:33 | 20 |
| After New York's 11 fatality season last year, the legislature began a move
towards mandatory hunter orange. Prior to passing the legislation, they
commissioned a study to see if mandatory hunter orange would prove to be
beneficial. The results of this study validate what my position has been on
mandatory hunter orange all along.
Currently 40 states have mandatory orange laws, and 10 suggest orange but do
not mandate it. Common sense would indicate that the mandatory orange states
would have lower accident rates than the others, at least according to
conventional wisdom. Predictably (IMO), though, this is not the case. While
the states with mandatory orange laws have low accident rates, states with
no such laws have LOWER accident rates. (It looks to be about 50% lower.)
And we are not comparing apples to oranges, either. Among the states with
no mandatory orange laws are NY and CA, states with millions of hunters and
high hunter densities. The study also showed that compliance in some of the
"orange optional" states exceeded that of some of the mandatory orange states.
The evidence is in. Mandatory orange laws are counter productive. This should
be good ammunition for the annual introduction of hunter orange legislation
in NH...
|
1098.112 | | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | The deerhuntermeistersupreme | Mon Dec 07 1992 12:09 | 5 |
| re.111, this is real interesting. Can you input the exact numbers,
or send them to me a1?
bob
|
1098.113 | John Harrigans Outddor column | SALEM::MACGREGOR | | Mon Dec 07 1992 12:27 | 5 |
| re .111
I take it you read John Harrigans column in the sports section of
the N.H. Sunday News yesterday. I also thought it was very informative.
If I remember to bring in the article tomorrow I will post the numbers.
Bret
|
1098.114 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Wild Mountain Thunder | Mon Dec 07 1992 13:56 | 1 |
| Yep- it was from John Harrigan's column.
|
1098.115 | Carelessness.... | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Mon Dec 07 1992 15:09 | 28 |
|
I've always had a belief...and it's different than a lot of other
hunters. I've stated probably earlier in this notes string. I PREFER
not to wear hunter orange, not because the deer may see me...but
because other hunter might! People are scoping people all the time,
this has to be one of the #1 safety problems in the woods. People just
don't realize where the crosshairs are the bullet will hit, whether you
have the gun on a deer or a human. Never point a gun at anything
unless you intend to kill it!!!
Probably some of the biggest reasons people are getting shot are; 1. a
majority of hunters feel they HAVE to get a buck - their priorities are
wrong - and they don't just enjoy hunting, if they haven't killed
anything they feel unfulfilled - this is a social problem, it begins
with us putting pressure on each other to get the bigger deer etc...
2. most hunters don't spend much time in the woods and DON'T know the
difference between a deer and a human from their movement only - I'm
talking about the different movements in the body, legs, head, etc.,
you don't have to see the "whole" deer to know it's a deer if you know
how one moves in the woods...of course this is not a reason to shoot,
proper 100% visual identification must be made.
I hope this doesn't sound like rambling, but this is one issue that
makes my blood boil, and a major problem for the image of our sport,
which equates to the future.
Kevin
|
1098.116 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | Sacred cow? Let's barbecue! | Tue Dec 08 1992 01:03 | 3 |
| There's a long article on this in the latest issue of 'Deer & Deer
Hunting'. I believe the non-mandatory-orange states have about a
one-third lower accident rate. (Don't have the article handy.)
|
1098.117 | Proved it to myself... | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Dec 04 1995 13:31 | 18 |
| As an interesting side bar to an old note, I got my deer this year
wearing an orange hat, orange coat, orange pants, and orange gloves.
Two days later, I got a shot at one with the bow wearing the same
outfit. This was with no snow.
Yesterday, with snow, I had one walk up on me wearing all of the same
except for black gloves. He had locked onto me before I could draw. I had
hoped he would look down or something to give me time to draw, but that
never happened. If I can't take a single well placed shot, I don't shoot,
so after about a 10 sec. staring match, I just watched him bound off.
I guess the point in all this is that I am now a firm believer that
hunter orange has virtually no impact on being able to get deer. I
don't need any study to tell me the impact on deer. Unless I saw it
with my own eyes, I'd be skeptical anyway. To think that I used to even
do the camo face paint for bow season. Never again.
Ray
|
1098.118 | i read it another way... | 270WIN::LAFOSSE | WHEN THE BULLET HITS THE BONE... | Mon Dec 04 1995 15:07 | 41 |
| > <<< Note 1098.117 by FOUNDR::DODIER "Single Income, Clan'o Kids" >>>
> -< Proved it to myself... >-
>
> As an interesting side bar to an old note, I got my deer this year
> wearing an orange hat, orange coat, orange pants, and orange gloves.
> Two days later, I got a shot at one with the bow wearing the same
> outfit. This was with no snow.
>
> Yesterday, with snow, I had one walk up on me wearing all of the same
> except for black gloves. He had locked onto me before I could draw. I had
> hoped he would look down or something to give me time to draw, but that
> never happened. If I can't take a single well placed shot, I don't shoot,
> so after about a 10 sec. staring match, I just watched him bound off.
>
> I guess the point in all this is that I am now a firm believer that
> hunter orange has virtually no impact on being able to get deer. I
> don't need any study to tell me the impact on deer. Unless I saw it
> with my own eyes, I'd be skeptical anyway. To think that I used to even
> do the camo face paint for bow season. Never again.
>
> Ray
Ray,
i'm kinda confused reading your note... you say you shot one with what I assume
was a firearm, but did you see deer on 2 seperate occasions while hunting
with a bow???? one where you got a shot, and another where you didn't???
also... you contradict yourself... you say "I am now a firm believer that
hunter orange has virtually no impact..." but, that the deer "had locked
onto me before I could draw... and just watched him bound off". I read this
as the orange is probably what gave you away...
while it may be true that wearing hunter orange still allows you to see deer,
it is a serious hindrance when trying to draw on one with a bow. it's not
the color that alerts them, it's the movement of the big bright object.
i'll stick with the camo and face paint when bowhunting...
JMHO, Fra
|
1098.119 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Dec 04 1995 16:28 | 11 |
| Deer have a good sense of smell, hearing, and can see movement very
good, but are color-blind. It's the movement and the large patch
of solid color that gives you away. If you could wear the orange with
the camo-pattern, they wouldn't be able to see you as well, but that's
illegal in Colorado.
BTW bulls are color-blind also. The bull-seeing-red is also a farce.
In a bullfight, the bull charges the movement of the cape, not the
red, while the matadore(sp) stands as still as possible.
fred();
|
1098.120 | Clarification | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Mon Dec 04 1995 19:40 | 44 |
| re:118
I shot one with the rifle, then got a shot at one with the bow two
days later. This was on 11/9 and 11/11 respectively. The first one I shot
with the gun seemed to have no clue I was there.
The one I shot at with the bow also had no clue I was there. I knew
about where it was going to be coming from and had set-up behind a tree to
screen my movement from a deer coming in that general direction. Other than
that tree, I was fairly wide open. I was sitting at the edge of on old
logging road.
I'm positive that the one that "locked on" to me yesterday would have
done so whether I was wearing camo or not. It came from the opposite
direction I had expected and I was wide open from that direction. Clearly
a set-up error on my part. I had absolutely nothing to shield my motion
from a deer coming in that direction. Error #1.
I should also mention that it was about 20' (not yards) from me when
it locked on. I also first thought it was a doe. Considering the number
of deer taken out of this piece this year, and the fact that I already
have one in the freezer, I was going to let does go. It turned out to be
a 3-pointer with a very skinny rack. By the time I saw the rack and
thought to draw, it was literally too close. Error #2.
Even with all that went wrong, a more seasoned hunter may have
still gotten that deer. Had I drawn the instant I first saw it I
probably would have gotten a shot anyway. I froze when it locked on,
but was told that I should have tried just *slowly* raising my bow
and drawing on it anyway. Error #3. Hell, it would have been better
than what I did, which was nothing :-o Live and learn.
Of the three deer I just mentioned, the most difficult shot of any was
the first one (the one I got). I have no doubt that I would have taken all
3 of these deer with my rifle.
This is not to say that I'll be wearing orange during bow only
season, although I will never again do face paint ;-) My point is that,
based on my experiences, I think the perceived advantage of camo is way
over-rated. Other than orange camo, anyone that thinks they need to be in
full camo during rifle season (IMHO) is taking way more risk than the
benefit is worth.
Ray
|
1098.121 | no camo here.... | ACISS1::ROGERSR | hard on the wind again | Mon Dec 04 1995 23:06 | 20 |
| I also believe camo is over rated. Only wear the stuff when it gets
real cold as all my deep chill stuff is still camo. The early season
gets a set of forest green sweats, a loden pullover and a black
balaclava. Dark blue gloves for the hands, and up in a pine, cedar or
hemlock, I'm hard to see.
They do see me though, I freeze and they pass it off..look away.
If I decide to shoot and have the feet and body right, I'll wait until
the first distraction, then draw and do it right now! not slowly. Of
course they get the movement and look right up......but they can't
figure out what the heck I am, the arrow is darn quick..
I'm still batting 1000 (every release is a dead deer), a record that
is beginning to be very important to me.
BTW, vanilla extract is a darn efficient cover scent and is cheap and
best of all, available in every single food store.
|
1098.122 | same here | STRATA::HARGETT | Already, not the new guy | Mon Dec 04 1995 23:55 | 6 |
| I have taken two deer in a three year span. On both occasions I
wore an orange hat, gloves, and overhauls. IMO camo, UV-killer, etc., is
just a waste of money and a big ploy from companys looking for more
profits. I would rather be safe than shot by some stupid so called
hunter.
|
1098.123 | congrats to all btw | CPEEDY::MACINTYRE | Terminal Angler | Tue Dec 05 1995 12:44 | 25 |
| If you're sitting under a hemlock in low light, my guess would be that
deer would detect movement alot easier if you were in hunter orange,
as opposed to a darker camo. It's just so much brighter. During the
day, I would think it would not make as much difference.
I ALWAYS where hunter orange while I'm moving, minimumly a hat, most
often with a red plaid jacket. When light is low and I'm moving I'll
always where a orange vest as well.
However if I'm on a stand (tree or ground) I'll take some risk. During
firearms season, I'll drape my orange vest over a branch, where it is
highly visible, but it is not moving with me. If I detect another hunter
anywhere nearby, I'll grab my orange hat and flag him so he sees me.
Saturday PM, I was sitting under a hemlock, in camo coveralls, with my
vest propped up next to me. When the light was low and time was just
about out, I set the gun down, stood up, stretched, a minute later,
BEFORE I picked up my rifle, a nice buck materialized 25' away... He
didn't see me. My guess would be that had I been wearing alot of orange,
he would have detected the bright movement while I was standing up,
stretching, etc... (Unfortunately he wound up HEARING me and bolted 8^)
But, RayJ, whatever your doing, you're obviously doing it right 8^)
-donmac
|
1098.124 | | TWIZZL::ERICKSON | Can the Coach... | Tue Dec 05 1995 15:43 | 16 |
|
Camo does help you blend in to your surroundings. Thus, allowing
you a little more movement, without being detected. If the deer
doesn't smell you and see you move. It doesn't matter what you are
wearing.
The Camo face paint is to stop the glare from the sun. The sun
reflecting off of your face into your eyes. Causes your eyes to light
up. Almost like a deers eyes at night when the light hits them. Except
not as drastic. The deer catch you moving, then they pick up the glow/
light of your eyes. This is why I was always told if a deer looks up
at you. Close your eyes and tilt your head forward slowly. Then open
your eyes slowly until you can just see the deer. With your head
facing down and your eyes only half open. Which means less light
entering your eyes, you eyes don't lite up.
Ron
|
1098.125 | Same thing, only different ;-) | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Tue Dec 05 1995 19:45 | 11 |
| re:121
> Only wear the stuff when it gets real cold as all my deep chill stuff
> is still camo.
Ironically, this is one of the same reasons I wound up wearing full
orange this year. I have no good camo cold weather gear. My father gave
me a two piece BRIGHT orange hunting suit earlier this year. I was real
skeptical about wearing it. Won't even give it a second thought now.
Ray
|
1098.126 | Orange hat | ACISS2::VANDENBARK | Makes me happy! | Wed Dec 06 1995 12:07 | 6 |
| I was out Sat in Ohio and had a small flock of turkeys cross in front
of me while wearing my orange hat. I also saw 21 deer that day while
wearing the orange hat. The turkeys did act a little nervous though,
but continued in front of me anyway.
Wess
|
1098.127 | | NCMAIL::GEIBELL | FISH NAKED | Wed Dec 06 1995 16:32 | 58 |
|
I would say that movement and brightness difference are the 2
biggest factors of deer "locking on" to a person. there have been
studies done on deer eyeballs, they found light gathering rods and
color cones, now how they distiguish what color they see is beyond
me.
I have hunted a good number of years, have shot alot of deer, with
a gun and with a bow, very few times have i ever been locked on, when i
have it been caused by 2 things, lack of backround or movement. a deer
can catch even the slightest movement.
i think that saying camo doesnt matter is a pretty broad statement,
if there is hunting pressure in your area during firearm season and
there are alot of people out, human scent is everywhere in the woods
the deer become alittle less spooky unless the scent is really strong.
its just like hunting around an active farm, the deer get used to
seeing people so they dont pay much attention to them., last monday i
was hunting in Pa the first day of buck season, just prior to shooting
that 8 point the doe he was following was standing no more than 10 feet
in front of me. the only time she locked on me was when i moved the '06
into position to shoot the buck.
in this above mentioned scenario i had on a solid blaze orange
parka, orange hat, orange neck warmer, and treebark bib pants. but this
doe had no idea or didnt care i was there till i moved the gun about 3
inches to the right. after i shot she bolted, if i was fast enough i
coulda tripped her she ran by so close.
In response to uv killer not being helpfull, well i may agree to
some extent during the daylight hours that uv killer doesnt help much
but i have used it with huge success during the early morning, late
evening hours. this is when i had the biggest problem with deer
catching even the slightest movement. i had heard about uv killer but
being a person that doesnt just run out and buy every new fad thing
that hits the market i never tried it till a bowhunting friend told me
he thot it made a big difference.
So on his word i got some and treated one suit, i tried it out
before season, and was really shocked at how much movement i could get
away with, then i went out to the same stand with an entreated suit on
and i was simmulating raising the bow, well i got my left arm up about
3" before the deer caught the movement. since that test i have treated
all my suits. and now the stuff is pretty cheap to buy.
I have shot deer from the ground with the bow, its alot tougher
than out of a tree stand, you have gotta be on your toes at all times
and you better be at full draw when the shot is presented, and you
generally dont have as much time to shoot as you would out of a tree,
and also as you found out sometimes the deer dont cooperate by coming
in at an odd angle, or by showing up behind you. its tough but by no
means impossible. heck i shot a buck here in NY last year, i was
kneeling in a corn field, he walked right up to 4 yards before a shot
was presented, his eyes dissapeared in the ditch to get a drink and i
took the opportunity to draw and shoot.
just my .02 fwiw
Lee
|
1098.128 | Less important | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Wed Dec 06 1995 18:36 | 15 |
| re:127
> i think that saying camo doesnt matter is a pretty broad statement,
Sorry if I implied this. It can make a difference, but it is not
anywhere near as much of a factor as I once thought. It certainly has
moved down from one of the top 5 things I worry about, especially
during rifle season.
As I get older I tend to fidget less. If you don't move around as
much, having camo becomes less important too. My view of wearing so much
orange prior to this year was that, even to a deer, you'd stick out like
a tampon dispensor in a men's room.
Ray
|
1098.129 | What really scares them ? | PEAKS::WASON | WORK a word used by those who don't know how to hunt | Wed Dec 06 1995 18:37 | 7 |
| I always wear camo for bow and full 'pumkin' suit for rifle.
Just cos.
P.S. In Colorado If the crome on there bumbers or there ATV's dont scare the
deer Heck a 'pumkin' suit wont iether ;-}
~dave
|
1098.130 | | STRATA::RINELLA | | Wed Dec 06 1995 19:10 | 21 |
|
I had a comment on movement. A couple of years ago I was on a ground
stand in camo and in front of a mossy boulder. About thirty yards or
so to my left I had a big buck coming in on me. Unfortunately I had my
bow up against the boulder and was getting ready to do a little still
hunting since it was ten in the morning. While kneeling and moving the
bow into position, as the direction this buck was traveling was going to
take it directly in front of me, my arrow clicked on the boulder so I
froze, fearing it had heard the noise. But it just kept on coming. I
couldn't believe that while slowing moving the bow and drawing it on
the buck in never picked up my movement. MY timing was off though and
by the time I was at full draw, I lost it in the peep sight to my right
where it got too thick for a well placed shot. It passed only 12 yards
in front of me! The buck then went directly under my buddies tree stand and
as he drew on him, it looked right up at my buddy and bolted.
I read an article that stated if you time your movement with the deers
movement, it won't pick you out because everything around it appears
to be moving also. After this incident, I tend to believe it.
Gus
|
1098.131 | | ACISS1::ROGERSR | hard on the wind again | Wed Dec 06 1995 23:18 | 12 |
| try this....with your car sitting still watch the movement the wind
makes in the tree limbs......
now drive down road and try to see the same movement.
We don't have the brain cells needed to process the relative movement
unless it is pretty severe (full gale). Everything looks stock still.
could be that the same relates to game.......
|
1098.132 | Slow and easy | ACISS2::VANDENBARK | Makes me happy! | Thu Dec 07 1995 10:23 | 9 |
| Gus,
I tend to think you are right, as long as the movement isn't sudden.
Try it with Turkeys.......They've busted me more than once.
Good Luck,
Wess
|