Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Oppose SB 1221 - Hunting with Hounds

Authored by Ted Lieu and Darrell Steinberg (both senators frequently present HSUS-sponsored legislation), SB 1221 is currently held in the California Senate Natural Resources and Water committee. This bill is a senseless anti-hunting measure that preys upon a public misperception of hound hunting as being "cruel". The below article dispels that cruelty myth, and explains why hunting with hounds is both humane and a sensible and valuable tool for wildlife managment.



Not only is this bill unreasonable as a hunting and wildlife managment measure, but it places the very lives of our dogs in danger. Any dog felt to be a threat to a "big game mammal" can be captured and/or "dispatched" (i.e. KILLED) by game wardens, and the owner of the dog would have no recourse.


The hearing for this bill will be on April 24th. You can easily contact your senator (if (s)he is a member of the Senate Natural Resources and Water Committee) by using this convenient Capwiz tool from NAIA:


http://capwiz.com/naiatrust/issues/alert/?alertid=61134801&queueid=8145961451


U.S. Sportsmen's Alliance


801 Kingsmill Parkway, Columbus, OH 43229


Ph. 614/888-4868 • Fax 614/888-0326


Website: www.ussportsmen.org • E-mail: info@ussportsmen.org






FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Mike Faw (614) 888-4868 x 214


April 3, 2012 Sharon Hayden (614) 888-4868 x 226






The U.S. Sportsmen's Alliance is working with California Houndsmen for Conservation (CHC) and others to defeat California Senate Bill 1221, which would ban bear and bobcat hunting with hounds. In this article, CHC president, Josh Brones provides the truth about hound hunting:


What's Right about Hunting with Hounds


Senate Bill 1221 would ban the use of hounds to hunt bobcats and bears in California. The sponsors of SB 1221 allege that the use of hounds is inhumane, unsporting and unfair. Unfortunately, the information they use to support this bill comes from anti-hunting organizations that have no motivation to be truthful about the practice.


I have raised, trained, and hunted with hounds since 1986, and I believe it is critically important for legislators, the media, and the public to hear from people who actually hunt with hounds in order to truly understand and appreciate the many aspects of this time-honored tradition.


Here are 10 facts about hound hunting:


1. Hound hunting has been legal since the inception of the California Department of Fish and Game, and is relied upon to help meet management goals. The Department's own environmental impact documents consistently indicate that the use of dogs and radio telemetry collars does not threaten the survival or prosperity of our bear population. In fact, California's bear population has nearly quadrupled over the past thirty years...all while the use of hounds has been permitted.


2. Hound hunting is virtually the only form of non-consumptive hunting, and is very similar to catch-and-release fishing. The ultimate goal of using hounds is not the harvest of wildlife, but the enjoyment gained in training, listening to, and interacting with the dogs during the pursuit. As such, hound hunters often take fewer animals than is prescribed by the Department on an annual basis.


3. Hound hunting is a highly effective form of wildlife management. It allows an animal's age and sex to be determined before any attempt to harvest is made. It also allows a houndsman to determine if a female is pregnant, nursing, or has offspring so that they can be left alive and well in the tree.


4. If a hunter would like to take the animal for food, the close range of the treed bear allows the hunter to ensure that the harvest of the animal is very quick and humane.


5. Radio telemetry equipment is used to promote the welfare of the hound and does so primarily when the dog is no longer pursuing the bear. The equipment does not enhance the hound's ability to catch up to the bear, nor does it hinder the bear's ability to evade the hound...it simply allows the hunter to find his hound in deep canyons or mountainous terrain, or prevent the hound from entering into private property or upon highways. The use of radio telemetry would only be unfair if the radio telemetry collar was put on the bear, but clearly, that is not the case.


6. The use of hounds is a primary means of facilitating wildlife research. In fact, hounds are used in all California mountain lion studies currently being conducted. This is due to the fact that the use of hounds is an effective, stress-free, and minimally invasive way of capturing mountain lions so as to collect samples and fit them with radio telemetry and GPS collars.


7. The use of hounds is one of the most fundamental forms of hunting and can be boiled down to the houndsman, the dog, and the animal they are pursuing. The relationship between bears and hounds can be traced back to the origins of both species. The bear may decide to climb a tree, but it does so only because the instincts and physiology developed from its ancestors' interaction with the hound's ancestor motivates it to; this interaction is not stressful or harmful to the bear, and many bears fall asleep in the tree while they wait for the houndsman to come get their dogs so that the bear can go about its business.


8. The use of hounds for the hunting of bear and bobcat requires specially bred dogs, a tremendous amount of time and training for the hound and hunter, and an extensive amount of dedication and sacrifice on the part of the hunter. It is not a lifestyle to be entered into without an abundance of deliberation, nor is it an activity that is easy or without challenge. Any success with hounds must come as the result of countless generations of careful breeding of the hound and a lifetime spent learning about hounds and wildlife on the part of the hunter.


9. Our hounds are very much like family. In addition to the culmination of effort and money that they represent, the time we spend with them and the memories we share forge a bond that is very difficult to describe. The relationship between hounds and their hunters is similar to that of a parent and their child because we are often there when they are born, we name them, we raise them, we remember all of their milestones during their growth, we beam with pride when they have done well, we worry about them if they are lost, and we cry like babies when they pass on.


10. The use of hounds allows for the timely and accurate resolution of incidents involving threats to public safety or livestock by identifying, locating, and taking only the offending animal.


(Editor's Note) Go to www.ussportsmen.org for more information on what's really behind Senate Bill 1221 and what you can do to help.


About USSA: The U.S. Sportsmen's Alliance's watchdog efforts protect hunters' rights and the interests of anglers, trappers and recreational shooters in the courts, legislatures, at the ballot, in Congress, and through many public education programs. The USSA has more than 170,000 registered Sentries that regularly receive information about conservation issues, and then they actively work to promote and protect scientific conservation through calls and contacts.


For more information about the U.S. Sportsmen's Alliance and the Sentry program, call (614) 888-4868 or visit: www.ussportsmen.org.


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