TheLBLman
Well-Known Member
If hunting is to continue, we need to be recruiting more hunters.
I think deer hunting is much more likely to end because old deer hunters like me will die off and young people won't replace us.
Rob speaks the truth here.
I realize on one one hand, we wish for fewer hunters to share the woods,
but on the other, once we die out, what happens to the sport of deer hunting?
Will the former sport just be replaced with government contracted sharp-shooters and deer depredation permits? That is the way we're heading without replacing the dying hunters with more youthful hunters.
CWD is just one of the reasons fewer youth are wanting to deer hunt, and one of the reasons fewer older hunters are wanting to kill deer to eat.
While we know it's safe to eat venison with CWD, non-hunters in particular, many to whom we were giving surplus venison from the higher doe kill we used to kill (in part justify by having friends/people wanting some venison) . . . . . . they just don't want venison like they once did.
Add to this the additional, sometimes confusing regulations regarding CWD, and it's another factor contributing to youth being more attracted to something like soccer than deer hunting.
CWD & fears of CWD also contributed greatly to the complete shut-down of many commercial deer processors in the CWD zones. One in particular many can relate is Yoder Brothers in Henry County, TN. Henry County has always been TN's #1 or near #1 deer-harvest county, and Yoder Brothers was the second largest deer processor in TN.
Between the perfect storm of CWD and Covid, Yoder's shut down. While Yoder's was in Henry County, TN, they were close to the KY State Line, and many West KY deer hunters brought their deer to Yoder's for processing. New CWD rules completely stopped transporting an unprocessed harvested deer across state lines. And, CWD rules stopped the transporting of an unprocessed deer across county lines (if the deer was taken in a CWD county).
Just saying, going deer hunting has been progressively becoming a more complicated and costly venture, particularly to "new" and/or youth hunters. The regulations can be almost over-whelming even to an avid lifelong hunter like myself.