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  Elk Hunting 
  Philosophy Quotes
 
 
  Quotes of Hunting Wisdom and Philosophy
  “When
  the
  last
  deer
  disappears
  in
  the
  morning
  mist
  -
  --- 
  When
  the
  last
  elk
  vanishes
  from
  the
  hills,
  ----When
  the 
  last
  buffalo
  falls
  on
  the
  plains,
  ---
  -
  I
  will
  hunt
  for
  mice,
  for 
  I
  am
  a
  hunter
  and
  I
  must
  have
  my
  freedom.”
  (Chief 
  Joseph)
  “Hunting
  has
  opened
  the
  earth
  to
  me
  and
  let
  me
  sense 
  the rhythms and hierarchies of nature”  ( Charles Fergus)
  “To
  hunt
  successfully,
  you
  must
  know
  your
  ground,
  your 
  pack and your quarry.”( K. J. Parker)
  “Go
  afield
  with
  a
  good
  attitude,
  with
  respect
  for
  the 
  forest
  and
  fields
  in
  which
  you
  walk.
  Immerse
  yourself
  in 
  the
  outdoor
  experience.
  It
  will
  cleanse
  your
  soul
  and 
  make you a better person.” ( Fred Bear)
  “In
  civilized
  and
  cultivated
  country
  wild
  animals
  only 
  continue
  to
  exist
  at
  all
  when
  preserved
  by
  sportsmen. 
  The
  excellent
  people
  who
  protest
  against
  all
  hunting,
  and 
  consider
  sportsmen
  as
  enemies
  of
  wildlife,
  are
  ignorant 
  of
  the
  fact
  that
  in
  reality
  the
  true
  sportsman
  is
  by
  all
  odds 
  the
  most
  important
  factor
  in
  keeping
  the
  larger
  and
  more 
  valuable
  creatures
  from
  total
  extinction.”
  (Theodor 
  Roosevelt)
  “There
  are
  some
  
  that
  can
  live
  without
  wild
  things
  and 
  some who cannot.” (Aldo Leopold)
  “If
  God
  didn’t
  want
  man
  to
  hunt,
  he
  would
  not
  have
  given 
  him plaid shirts.” ( Johhny Carson)
  “For
  us
  hunting
  was
  not
  a
  sport,
  but
  a
  way
  to
  intimate 
  with nature. (Ted Kerasote)
  If
  the
  hunter
  comes
  back
  with
  mushrooms,
  don’t
  ask
  him 
  how the hunt was. (Ghanaian proverb)
  “There
  are
  those
  that
  say
  the
  kill
  does
  not
  matter
  They 
  are
  fools
  or
  liars.
  I
  can
  laugh
  at
  misses,
  pass
  up
  and
  an 
  easy
  shot
  when
  there
  is
  reason,
  and
  come
  home
  empty 
  handed.
  The
  kill
  matters.
  And
  the
  manner
  of
  the
  kill 
  matters.” (Robert Elman)
  “Some
  people
  ask
  why
  men
  go
  hunting.
  They
  must
  be
  the 
  kind
  who
  seldom
  get
  away
  from
  the
  highways.
  What
  do 
  they
  know
  of
  the
  tryst
  a
  hunting
  man
  keeps
  with
  the 
  wind
  and
  the
  trees
  and
  the
  sky?
  Hunting?
  The
  means
  are 
  greater
  than
  the
  end,
  and
  every
  hunt
  matters.”
  (Gordon 
  Macquarrie)
  “The
  emotions
  that
  good
  hunters
  need
  to
  cultivate
  are 
  love
  and
  service
  more
  than
  courage.
  The
  sentiments
  of 
  the hunt then become translated into art.” ( James Swan)
  “It
  sound
  like
  more
  of
  –
  instead
  of
  hunting-
  a
  wildlife
  kill. 
  That takes a lot of sport out of hunting.” (Brett Hall)
  “Hunting
  is
  not
  a
  sport.
  In
  a
  true
  sport,
  both
  sides
  should 
  know they are in the game.” ( Paul Rodriguez)
  “The
  first
  rule
  of
  duck
  hunting
  is
  to
  go
  where
  the
  ducks 
  are.” (Jase Robertson)
  Alaska
  Golds
  Rush:
  
  Hunting
  philosophy
  should
  evoke
  the
   
  elation
  created
  by
  the
  1897-1898
  gold
  rush
  
  to
  the
  Yukon. 
  The
  gold
  seekers
  toiled
  up
  the
  Chilcoot
  Pass
  in
  winter, 
  ferrying
  the
  required
  2,200
  pound
  of
  provisions
  per
  man. 
  They
  cut
  down
  trees,
  sawed
  then
  into
  boards,
  built
  boats 
  an
  1,300
  tubs
  careened
  down
  the
  river
  when
  the
  ice 
  broke
  in
  spring.
  They
  were
  hungry,
  tired
  miserable
  and 
  lost
  much
  or
  all
  of
  their
  and
  their
  relatives’’
  wealth
  in
  the 
  frenzied
  pursuit.
  
  Most
  never
  made
  a
  cent,
  but
  almost
  all 
  said
  they
  would
  do
  it
  all
  over
  again
  if
  possible.
  In
  the 
  setting
  of
  the
  Depression
  of
  the
  1890,
  it
  was
  truly
  “the 
  Last
  Grand
  Adventure”.
  May
  you
  too,
  after
  earned 
  perseverance,
  some
  game
  harvesting
  success,
  expanded 
  patience,
  and
  a
  love
  of
  adventure
  also
  be
  able
  to
  relish 
  your
  hunting
  experiences
  –
  and
  in
  old
  age
  have
  a
  last 
  dream that you too could do it again!
  Archery
  Season
  and
  Having
  a
  Heart
  :
  The
  seven
  fawns 
  curiously
  and
  silently
  settled
  in
  front
  of
  the
  two 
  babysitting
  does
  into
  a
  neat
  phalanx
  of
  kinder
  school 
  students,
  creating
  a
  heart-melting
  corsage
  in
  the
  green 
  grass.
  
  It
  would
  have
  fractured
  my
  heart
  and
  soul
  to
  shoot 
  one
  of
  the
  two
  baby
  sitters,
  or
  maybe
  even
  step
  mothers. 
  The
  endearing
  sight
  was
  much
  more
  valuable
  than 
  elation of hunting success or any meat could be
  .