Skip to main content

“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind.” ~~ John G. Diefenbaker

CLOVECHOK: As my Dad would say, ‘By virtue of the fact that we are hunters, we are conservationists’

Columbia River - Revelstoke MLA Doug Clovechok

My Dad taught my brother and I how to hunt and fish from an early age. He taught the values that come with these activities, he helped us discover the deep-seated love and respect we have to this day for all things wild. 

As my Dad would say, 'By virtue of the fact that we are hunters, we are conservationists'.

Fast forward a couple of decades and now some of the most rewarding moments in my life have been teaching my children, and my grandchildren, how to hunt and fish. The rewards come in many ways. 

It is where a mother and father can witness the first time their children hit the target with their pellet gun. It is where parents can experience the excitement of watching his son or daughter hyperventilating at the sight of his first buck in the wild.  Then the first time, in the deer camp, when you hear the excited exclamations of your kids who have finally managed to take their first buck. 

It’s a youthful reminder of your own reaction to your similar experience decades ago.

Hunting teaches children self-reliance, teaches them about the natural food cycle, inspires the love of the great outdoors, represents a rite of passage, teaches conservationism, and promotes fitness and life skills to mention but a few. 

Why do we hunt? To pass on traditions so that our kids and their kids will know why.  However, people who don’t hunt always ask me why I do.

It’s not always an easy question to answer, because the passion for it is rooted in my DNA.  It is a bond we have with the wild world – the wilderness -- and a connection to an innate knowledge that we are part of something far greater than ourselves. The bush always reminds a hunter of this reverence. 

Then there is the unexpected.


Columbia River - Revelstoke MLA Doug Clovechok
I am always reminded of the time we were calling in a bull Elk.  Instead of the bull crashing out of a poplar grove, a Grizzly sow and her two very large cubs rushed thinking our call was an Elk. The three bears stopped, rose up onto their hind legs, and then tried to get a scent of what they thought was an Elk, but instead was our calling. Fortunately, the wind was in our favour, and they eventually moved off.

To this day I can remember the feelings their charge brought. The hair on the back of my neck standing up, the sound of my pounding heart that felt like it was coming out of my chest, and the absolute exhilaration of this experience for what I still today view as a true gift. 

It gave me an understanding that we as humans, placed into the natural environment we evolved in, are not only connected -- but vulnerable.
At that moment in time, at that very moment in my life, I knew I was exactly where I was supposed to be and doing what I was meant to do.

Now, if you’ll recall, early on I asked the questions, “Why do we hunt?”  Now, I'll end with the most important reason ... and that is conservation. 

The final video below speaks to the conservation aspect of hunting and why it is always at the forefront of all things we do as hunters. Although the video is presented through the eyes of an American hunter, it reflects the exact sentiments we as Canadian hunters hold as well.

I want to thank those who have taken the time to read, and watch this conversation on Why We Hunt. 

For those of you who do not hunt it is my sincere hope that you now have a better understanding as to why so many of us choose to hunt. To those of you that do hunt, hold the flame high as you wade through the next mountain stream following the spirit that drives you.  


For the women and men who hunt, I am betting the following videos will reaffirm the passion and pride you have for hunting. For those that don’t hunt, it is my sincere hope that you will not only enjoy the videos, but will come away with an understanding and respect for hunting and why we do what we do.

Please note that if you don't hunt, you may find some of the scenes to be eye-opening, as these are real videos about hunting.

Thank you to the hunters for creating these videos; they are full of beautiful scenery and majestic animals. 

Why We Hunt (extended)

Hunting ... Who We Are


Why I Hunt - Conservation Is My Responsibility by Randy Newberg

Comments

  1. Thank you for sharing you story, and these videos. So many of us honestly have no idea where our food comes from, and have lost that connection connection to our environment outside of the city.

    Thanks again from you 'conservative's buddy :)

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

BC’s Forestry Decline Is a Policy Failure, Not a Market Reality -- Forestry Critic Calls for Accountability and Urgent Policy Reset

Conservative Party of BC Forestry Critic, and Kamloops - North Thompson MLA,  Ward Stamer As the Truck Loggers Association convention begins today, BC Conservative Forestry Critic Ward Stamer says British Columbia’s forestry crisis is the result of government mismanagement, not market forces, and that an urgent policy reset is needed to restore certainty, sustainability, and accountability. “For generations, forestry supported families and communities across BC,” said Stamer.  “Today, mills are closing, contractors are parking equipment, and families are being forced to leave home, not because the resource is gone, but because policy has failed.” Government data shows timber shipment values dropped by more than half a billion dollars in the past year, with harvest levels falling by roughly 50 per cent in just four years. At the same time, prolonged permitting timelines, unreliable fibre access, outdated forest inventories, and rising costs have made long-term planning impossib...

BC cannot regulate, redesign, and reinterpret its way to a stable forestry sector. Communities need clear rules, predictable timelines, and accountability for results.

Photo credit:  Atli Resources LP   BC’s Forestry Crisis Continues with Closure of Beaver Cove Chip Facility   As industry leaders, Indigenous partners, and contractors gather this week at the BC Natural Resources Forum in Prince George, the gap between government rhetoric and reality could not be clearer. Just hours after the Eby government once again touted reconciliation, certainty, and economic opportunity under DRIPA, Atli Chip Ltd, a company wholly owned by the ’Na̱mg̱is First Nation, announced it is managing the orderly closure of its Beaver Cove chip facility. The closure comes despite public tax dollars, repeated government announcements, and assurances that new policy frameworks would stabilize forestry employment and create long-term opportunity in rural and coastal British Columbia. “British Columbians are being told one story, while communities are living another,” said Ward Stamer, Critic for Forests. “This closure makes it clear that announcement...

Stamer: Hope for Forestry Completely Shattered After Another Provincial Review Driven by DRIPA

IMAGE CREDIT:  Provincial Forestry Advisory Council Conservative Critic for Forests Ward Stamer says the final report from the Provincial Forestry Advisory Council confirms the worst fears of forestry workers and communities; instead of addressing the real issues driving mill closures and job losses, the NDP has produced a report that ignores industry realities and doubles down on governance restructuring. Despite years of warnings from forestry workers, contractors, and industry organizations about permitting delays, regulatory costs, fibre access, and the failure of BC Timber Sales, the PFAC report offers no urgency, no timelines, and no concrete action to stop the ongoing decline of the sector. “ This report completely shatters any remaining hope that the government is serious about saving forestry ,” said Stamer.  “ We didn’t need another study to tell us what industry has been saying for years. While mills close and workers lose their livelihoods, the NDP is focused on re...

Labels

Show more