"Roger Ohlund" wrote in message
...
"William Claspy" wrote in message
...
I can't stop looking at those pictures! Are the bushes with such
beautiful
fall color on them the berry bushes? Cloudberry and lingon? Gosh.
Blueberry bushes, they look like that after the first nights with freezing
temperatures.
I've got a question though that just struck me. I'm not a hunter, so
bear
with me, and I'm not trying to start an argument. Just a question from
someone with no experience in that sport:
The total sum of ptarmigans shot during the trip was to
become exactly 100.
What do you do with that many birds? I mean, did you take them all home
with you to eat, or do you leave them there for the scavenger animals?
We took them all home. I shot 17 of those, not as good as the other guys
with the shotgun (they have both competed shooting trap).
Andreas sells his birds to people that cannot go there hunting and a
restaurant in London, he might save 10 for himself but not much more.
What Jimmy did with his birds I haven't got a clue about.....
Fascinating that such a tremendous population of birds can be maintained
where hunters can legally sell their game. Here in Wisconsin, and in most,
if not all, of the U.S. (as far as I know) such practices are strictly
forbidden and violations are met with very severe fines and even jail time.
All this for good reason; more than one species (passenger pigeons come
readily to mind) were driven to extinction by market hunting, and numerous
others (bison, for example) to the brink. Were the practice still allowed
here, Bubba would exterminate anything and everything even remotely
edible......not to mention many other things that aren't. We are nothing,
if not effective killers.
A most interesting addendum to one of the cruelest trip reports ever posted
to ROFF.
Wolfgang
who, in all likelihood, will never get to go to such a magical place.