You know something, @baxterb ? I agree with you 100%. The word “Trophy Hunting” indicates that we are simply hunting the game for a head mount or a hide. So shallow and one dimensional.A modest proposal: abandon the term “trophy hunting” completely, now and forever.
It is a rhetorically charged term that instantly conjures negative images of white hunters with their foot on a dead animal, whose head will be cut off and the body left to rot.
You might not think it matters…but it does. Continuing to use a term that has been co-opted and redefined by anti-hunters to stain ALL hunters is to be playing on their terms. Don’t do it.
Hunting undermines conservation, right?
Wrong.
Much better…
You know something, @baxterb ? I agree with you 100%. The word “Trophy Hunting” indicates that we are simply hunting the game for a head mount or a hide. So shallow and one dimensional.
It’s no different from hunting a good deer stag/buck and retaining the head as a nice souvenir after sustainably utilizing all of the venison. So why does hunting a Cape buffalo or an elephant or a lion in Africa have to carry this negative title, when not an ounce of the meat goes to the vultures ?
It’s no different from hunting a good deer stag/buck and retaining the head as a nice souvenir after sustainably utilizing all of the venison. So why does hunting a Cape buffalo or an elephant or a lion in Africa have to carry this negative title, when not an ounce of the meat goes to the vultures ?
Thanks so much for sharing this. It has some great stats I can use for a talk I am doing at the Serengeti Park Zoom next week (via Zoom). I'm afraid that I'm stepping into the lions den. I'm not sure they knew the message in my book before inviting me. SueBecause so long as the anti-hunters control the narrative, they are able to convince people that taking the head and abandoning the meat is exactly what we do. I've lost track of the number of people who have asked me "but what happens to the meat?" When I explain that it is fully utilized by the outfitter, his staff, and the locals the usual response is something along the lines of "oh well then that's OK."
@baxterb said it well;I am a Professional Hunter, and have been in the professional hunting and conservation business for just over 35 years!
LET'S BE VERY CLEAR...
"Trophy hunting undermines conservation, right" YES RIGHT. Wrong, it does not. Do not let them control the narrative
Trophy hunting is "trophy hunting", conservation hunting is "conservation hunting" (Sustainable Use for Wildlife Conservation).....trophy hunting is NOT conservation! Wrong, you're allowing them to control the narrative.
READ IT...
That's why is undermines conservation!...my passion, my life and my conservation hunting work!
When the opposition is allowed to define terms to fit their narrative, and their skewed definition is not contested robustly, then the general public will use their terms in their context. If we (hunters) refuse to use their bastardized term, and never allow them to conflate hunting with poaching, we can open the eyes of the general public one conversation at a time and through writing such as the one posted.A modest proposal: abandon the term “trophy hunting” completely, now and forever.
It is a rhetorically charged term that instantly conjures negative images of white hunters with their foot on a dead animal, whose head will be cut off and the body left to rot.
You might not think it matters…but it does. Continuing to use a term that has been co-opted and redefined by anti-hunters to stain ALL hunters is to be playing on their terms. Don’t do it.
Hunting undermines conservation, right?
Wrong.
Much better…
This is something that Shane Mahoney and Jim Shockey have been saying for a long time, with the former advocating for the term "international hunting," and the latter arguing for the term "selective hunting."A modest proposal: abandon the term “trophy hunting” completely, now and forever.
It is a rhetorically charged term that instantly conjures negative images of white hunters with their foot on a dead animal, whose head will be cut off and the body left to rot.
You might not think it matters…but it does. Continuing to use a term that has been co-opted and redefined by anti-hunters to stain ALL hunters is to be playing on their terms. Don’t do it.
Hunting undermines conservation, right?
Wrong.
Much better…
This is something that Shane Mahoney and Jim Shockey have been saying for a long time, with the former advocating for the term "international hunting," and the latter arguing for the term "selective hunting."
The term "trophy hunting" has been twisted by the mainstream media and anti-hunting groups over many years to refer to a practice that just doesn't happen (i.e. killing rare animals just for their skin/head, and leaving the meat to rot.) Nevertheless, this is what the average person in the general public thinks of when they hear "trophy hunting."
The continued use of the term is counterproductive, even when it is being used in a context that is designed to promote hunting, such as the excellent document posted in this thread.