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- <text id=89TT2936>
- <title>
- Nov. 13, 1989: Heroes, Bears And True Baloney
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 13, 1989 Arsenio Hall
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 122
- Heroes, Bears and True Baloney
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By John Skow
- </p>
- <p> Let's say that I am the benevolent and enlightened despot
- of my exasperating homeland, the U.S.A., and can eliminate any
- stupidity or foolishness by waving my hand. I have already
- banished basketball coaches, light beer and neckties. Now, on
- the third or fourth day of hand waving, will I decide to ban
- hunting? My local newspaper, the Concord, N.H., Monitor,
- reports that black bears have migrated southward in our state.
- I knew this already. I haven't had the luck to see one, but a
- few weeks ago a neighbor saw three of them, presumably a female
- and two cubs, at the edge of a pond a few hundred feet from my
- house in central New Hampshire. We can all rest easy, however,
- because the state's fish and game commission has opened a
- five-week bear-hunting season in our county. Since Oct. 1, the
- hairy-eared fellows who keep two big-game rifles racked in the
- back windows of their pickups 52 weeks each year, in case World
- War III starts, have been blasting away at the hairy-eared
- invaders.
- </p>
- <p> The Monitor story told of a local farmer who had been
- pestered by bears getting into his feed corn. Had to shoot two
- last year, he said. A fish-and-game-commission biologist said,
- "Rather than have farmers kill the bears, we would rather have
- sportsmen utilize the resource." You get used to blood-sport
- bureaucratese; "utilize,"or "harvest," is what you do when you
- get something fuzzy and four-footed in your sights. As in most
- states, New Hampshire's fish and game policies often seem to be
- caught in a time warp, perhaps in the decade of the 1820s, when
- subsistence hunting was an important food source for most
- families. Bears, these days, behave like large raccoons. They
- are smart, cute, hungry corn thieves and garbage raiders, happy
- in the suburbs and virtually harmless. Last year the state paid
- less than $7,000 to corn farmers because of bear damage. This
- is a tolerable figure. It would cost more to keep a bear in the
- zoo. A citizen determined to be grumpy might reflect that while
- the last recorded human fatality from a bear attack in New
- Hampshire was in the 1700s, the last recorded human death from
- a hunter's blunder was last week.
- </p>
- <p> The fact is that in New Hampshire, it is hunters, not bears
- or deer or moose, that are troublesome pests. For most of the
- fall, shooting of some kind is legal, and while I am willing to
- risk a peppering of bird shot, I don't want to be hulled by the
- antitank ammunition used for bear or moose (59 moose no longer
- menace us as the result of a recent three-day shooting season).
- So most of us stay out of the woods during the year's most
- beautiful season. Once, during deer season, I rounded a turn on
- a logging road while running with my dogs. A couple of heroes
- were sitting in a pickup truck, drinking beer. One had his rifle
- trained on my midsection. If he had killed me, he would have
- received a severe talking-to from the authorities. No one I
- mentioned this to was surprised. They all had similar stories.
- </p>
- <p> So here I sit, leafing through Meditations on Hunting, by
- Jose Ortega y Gasset, who never jumped deer from a pickup truck.
- His book is a classy volume that hunters like my friend George
- Butler give, with wry smiles, to nonhunters like me. Butler is
- a gifted documentary filmmaker (Pumping Iron and Pumping Iron
- II: The Women) who was raised in Somalia and Kenya when hunting
- was a natural way of living in the great, broad grassland. His
- new documentary, called In the Blood and shot in Tanzania, is
- about hunting. The action builds toward a scene in which his
- eleven-year-old son Tyssen shoots his first buffalo and is
- "blooded" -- his forehead is smeared with the animal's blood --
- by a celebrated hunter, Robin Hurt. "Today you were part of
- nature," Hurt tells the boy. "It is also a sad occasion . . ."
- This is baloney, of course, but it is true baloney, like the
- guff about climbing a mountain because it is there. I am not so
- sure about another remark in the film, that killing is a way of
- taking responsibility for what you eat. I can take
- responsibility for eating meat without hunting, or spending my
- vacation hacking up beef quarters at an Armour plant.
- </p>
- <p> Still, Hurt is a serious man who believes that Kenya's
- decision to ban hunting in 1977 has led to the near extinction
- of elephants there. In the old days his clients and those of
- other hunters killed about 200 bulls a year, from an elephant
- population of about 160,000. When the hunters were forced out
- and game officials no longer patrolled the bush, gangs of ivory
- poachers moved in from Sudan and Somalia. Hurt is not optimistic
- about the future of animals or hunters in East Africa. "I don't
- think we're there for long," he says. But never mind Africa;
- it's truth time at home: Do I wave my despotic hand and ban
- hunting in the U.S.? (Silence. More silence; the despot is
- thinking hard.) At last, the answer: no.
- </p>
- <p> It is a glum, unconfident no. The fact is that hunters are
- pests. Their blather about improving wildlife is mostly
- self-serving (though the effective Ducks Unlimited effort to
- preserve wetlands is both self-serving and environment-serving,
- which is fair enough). But we all need true baloney, even the
- armed innocents from Massachusetts who drive up here, see three
- trees standing together in my side yard and think they have
- discovered the Big Woods. Their fantasy is bloody and obsolete,
- but hunting gives them something they can't get watching golf
- on the tube. Theodore Roosevelt wrote of the hunting life that
- "when it is gone, there can be no substitute." Probably true,
- for good or not.
- </p>
- <p> And the bears? Ah, the bears. They have put up with people
- for a long time. Hunters will kill them, and fish and game will
- close the season next year. And five or ten years from now, with
- luck, they will again begin to repopulate central New Hampshire.
- Maybe then I will see one.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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