Necessity con,inued,rompa9e The result is a potential population explosion, according to Greer. When that happens, the general hunting season is extended or a special hunting season is added. Special hunting seasons are often designed to reduce the number of breeding animals in a herd, Greer says, and thus reduce the further growth of the herd. But herds are also protected when they dip to low levels, as the muledeer in Eastern Oregon are currently being shielded. There, the general hunting season in many areas has been cut to seven days, he says, while the hunting season for blacktail deer in Lane County's McKenzie and Siuslaw management units is 39 days this year. Greer rejects the claim by anti-hunting groups that only the biggest and strongest deer and elk are shot. He points out that 44 percent of the deer shot in his district in the first weekend of the general hunting season were less than three years old. “The average hunter will take the first legal animal he sees,” Greer says. The larger animals are harder to hunt, he says, because they usually have several seasons of avoiding hunters behind them. “Bull elk and large bucks will prove that every year, because we don’t see them in the hunter bag but we do see them in our fall counts when we go out at night." Both Greer and Caine acknowledge that some hunters abuse their rights in the out doors — to the detriment of the hunting population in general. "The slob hunter gets a lot more visibility than what you might call the good hunter,” says Greer. ‘‘That guy — although he’s a very small percentage of the population — is the one who the finger gets pointed at. "Everyone notices what the slob hunter does,” he says. “No one notices what the good hunter does.” "Slob hunters” anger Caine because they not only don’t know how to use the outdoors, but they present a danger to other hunters and an incorrect image to the public. Caine professes frustration — and anger — when he talks of hunters wounding deer and leav ing them to bleed to death, or hunting deer but leaving the dead animal at the bottom of a canyon. Caine is equally frustrated by the emotionalism of some anti hunters, such as the television special “Guns of Autumn” which was^ shown several years ago. Greer points to a current bat tle in Maine as an example of where hunting fits into the outdoors. When the state wildlife department announced plans to allow limited hunting to reduce a burgeoning state moose popula tion that had grown to between 10,000 and 20,000, the state legislature moved to block the issuing of hunting permits. Greer believes the state win suffer in the long-run if the moose herd is allowed to con tinue growing. "You would probably have damage complaints running rampant. You would probably have to to into full-scale fencing or repellent or hazing or anything short of killing the animal. That is an expensive pro position,” Greer says. "Once it is taken out of the biologist’s hands, then you lose kind of control you might have to keep that population biological ly stable,” Greer says. “You can’t manage on a biological level through a legislature that makes its decisions based on emotional issues.” By John Healy | Y Continued from Page 4B Kelley says that man is wildlife's prime enemy. “Humans tend to destroy these systems by their lack of sensitivity and knowledge of the ways and the needs of the animals,” she says. “The best thing we can do to preserve what's left of our declining wildlife is to leave them in peace." Many species have become entirely extinct due to man’s manipulation of the wilderness. For example, the wolf is non existent in all but about three areas of the United States. According to Kelley, the eradication of wolves is part of the reason why there is an overabundance of deer in some areas. With no wolves to prey on deer and rodents, those popula tions explode, she says. Hunters often use the overabundance of deer as justification for their activities, but actually the best thing would be to bring back the wolves and leave them alone, Kelley says. "Make trapping, hunting and poisoning illegal and let the wolf take care of it,” she says. “Man messes everything up.” The three agree hunting is not as bad as some other forms of habitat manipulation, such as the clearcutting, spraying, and burning done by timber companies. “Habitat protection is our greatest concern,” says Wood, noting many people involved in the ONRC do hunt. “How forests and lands are managed — that is important.” Part of the callousness of peo ple stems from “the belief that because of being human you are superior to all other creatures on the planet and have some quasi divine right to hunt, trap, poison or maim any animal besides a human,” says Kelley. The image of the macho hunter is another reason many men hunt, says Kelley Many men are taught to be tough in early hunting ex periences and to hide their inner feelings of horror at the killing of innocent animals, she says. ‘‘Perhaps the hunter is a basically compassionate person who is secretly horrified by kill ing in such an uneven contest and by the sight of the animal suffering,” says Kelley. "But this person would sorrow secret ly because of a fear of not being tough. This person may have been taught by his father that hunting is some sort of badge of manhood." The man should just face up to his feelings and "tell his fami ly he no longer subscribes to this barbarism," she says He should start to teach his MATTOX OUTDOOR OUTFITTERS Fall Warm-Up Sale Jammer — Three-ply taslan GoreTex fabric pullover jacket from North Face. It ensures that the weather stays where it belongs - outside. Available in mens and womens sizes in both navy and red. 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"For exam ple, I’d be very concerned if my daughter married a hunter.” Hunting is also “just a few steps apart" from killing in war, she says. Hunters are a real resource for the army because when they start using a gun they are already hardened to killing, she says. So if they are told to start aiming at humans, they are more likely to start shooting without questioning orders Another argument hunters use to justify killing animals is that people kill animals daily for their meat and often under less humane conditions than hunting. “If you eat meat, you are pay ing someone else to do the dirty work for you," says Kelley, who does not eat meat. "I don’t feel angry at everyone who eats meat. I accept there are non meat eaters and meat eaters." By Sandy Johnstone WILDERNESS FIELD STUDIES EARN COLLEGE CREDIT Natural history, field ecology, wilderness history and management, wilderness instructors school. Courses for 1984 in the Pacific NW, Sierra Nevada, Utah, Hawaii. Spr ing/Summer/Fall quarters. For information, write or call: Sierra Institute, 8ox C Carriage House UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA CRUZ, CA QS064 (408) 429 2761