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Wisconsin Hunters Harassed and Shot At in Canada
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Skunk
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Wisconsin Hunters Harassed and Shot At in Canada
«
on:
January 12, 2009, 07:56:03 AM »
Anyone hear about this? Not very neighborly of the Canucks, but a I guess a few bad apples don't spoil the whole bushell.
January 4, 2009
http://www.wausaudailyherald.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2009901040576
Deer hunters given threats in Canada
By Jim Lee
Gannett Wisconsin Media
KENORA, Ontario — Two central Wisconsin hunters say they were harassed, shot at and feared for their lives while pursuing trophy bucks in the Canadian wilderness.
"We were scared," said Rick Koenig, 60, of Wausau. "I've never had anything like that happen to me before. I won't go back. That was a little too much for me."
Koenig, along with his son, Brad, 31, of Wausau, son-law Chris Laska, 28, of Dale in Outagamie County, and Dennis Webb of Edgar, traveled to the Kenora area in northwestern Ontario at the end of October.
Deer hunters from the United States have traveled to portions of Manitoba and Saskatchewan in search of trophy whitetail bucks for several decades, but in recent years, northwestern Ontario has become popular. Wisconsin hunters are attracted to the region because it is within relatively easy driving distance.
"I shot a really nice buck in the Kenora area two years ago, and my cousin went to the same area last year and got a nice buck," Rick said. "We didn't have any problems."
The quartet spent their first day in Ontario this year scouting public "crown lands" for likely hunting spots, he said.
"We had parked along the road and when we got back to the truck, a car pulled up in front of us and another pulled up in back. They parked us in. A guy got out, shook his finger at us and said we couldn't park there.
"We said 'OK' and the next day — we had another vehicle — we parked way off the road in a ditch about a quarter mile away. When we got back to the car we found a note on it that read, 'Get this (expletive) car out of here.' "
Wanting to avoid conflict, Koenig said his group opted to move their hunting efforts nearer the Manitoba border about 50 miles from their motel.
"We had a four-wheel ATV along and took it about 3-4 miles down a trail we found," he said. "It looked like an old logging road or trapper's trail. We came to a beaver pond with fingers of land between rocky cliffs and water. There were buck rubbings, on trees, the size of your thighs. We split up and took stands.
"All of a sudden, there was a round of shots — bing, bing, bing, bing, bing. It was a .22 rifle. At first, we didn't think anything of it. We hadn't seen anyone and we were dressed in blaze orange. Then one of the shots whizzed over our heads ... and we said, 'Let's get out of here.'
"I moved as we started to leave and a shot hit right where I had been sitting. That really shook us up. There would be a round of shots, then silence as the guy apparently reloaded. Then the shooting would start again."
Koenig wanted to fire a round from his deer rifle into the air to let the hidden shooter know he was firing in the direction of people but Laska quickly talked him out of it.
"He'll think we're shooting back at him," Laska pointed out.
In all, 40-50 shots were probably fired, the two men said, with bullets "hitting the ground, rocks and trees all around us."
"In blaze orange, it's pretty hard to hide," Laska said. "I hollered, 'Hey, there are hunters in here! Quit shooting!' But the shots kept getting closer. Finally, I yelled, 'Please stop shooting at us. We'll get out of here.'
"I was laying on the ground with my GPS trying to figure out the closest way to get back to our ATV. We took off running. The guy didn't shoot again."
The two men reported the incidents to local officials of the Ontario Provincial Police. Koenig said they later heard reports of other incidents where hunters had been physically chased from the woods or had tires slashed.
"I think it's important that people know it's not the wonderful place it used to be," Laska said. "I don't know if people don't want foreign hunters in their hunting areas ... or what the problem is."
Colleen Ross, owner of the Kenora Inn Motel where the Wisconsin hunters stayed, said this is the first year hunters have complained of problems gaining access to public hunting lands.
"I think some (local) people have this idea that if you are from out of the country you ought to have a guide or tourist outfitter with you," she said. "If you don't, they feel it's taking money out of their pocket."
Laska said a police official suggested the shooting incident may have been an encounter with a hermit who didn't want anyone in his neighborhood.
Constable David Lovell of the Ontario Provincial Police said there have been minor incidents involving other hunters "but Americans are not being harassed more than anyone else."
He said the most common disputes involve hunters from outside the area hunting on land that is not open to public hunting or hunting public land where other hunters "feel the area is theirs."
Joan Hubay, enforcement supervisor of the Kenora Ministry of Natural Resources enforcement unit, said there has been an increase in complaints caused by "conflict between hunters and hunter ethics.
"In general, it's hunters targeting the rut and being concentrated in a short period of time. They're all trying to get the best areas to hunt and they're stepping on each other's toes."
Problems have grown in recent years as deer hunting's popularity has increased, she said, adding that the conflict involves residents versus residents as well as non-residents. Although there is plenty of public land, the favorite areas for hunting typically have relatively easy access, she noted.
Laska said he's not ready to abandon Ontario deer hunting.
"I'd love to go back," he said, "but I probably won't go to the same area."
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Mike
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Re: Wisconsin Hunters Harassed and Shot At in Canada
«
Reply #1 on:
January 12, 2009, 09:51:26 AM »
Vikings Fans or Bears Fans?
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Re: Wisconsin Hunters Harassed and Shot At in Canada
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Reply #2 on:
January 12, 2009, 10:03:19 AM »
Quote from: hunt-m-up on January 12, 2009, 09:51:26 AM
Vikings Fans or Bears Fans?
Well, given those two choices, I'd have to say neither. The Bear fans would have thrown beer bottles and I don't think the Queens actually have any fans, so it couldn't have been them.
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Mike
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Re: Wisconsin Hunters Harassed and Shot At in Canada
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Reply #3 on:
February 06, 2009, 01:58:33 PM »
Sure would be nice to enjoy your sport without getting shot at. Unfortunately, guiding services are way over priced up there in my opinion. To bad they can't get decent prices for furs anymore.
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Banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around the banks will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered - - Thomas Jefferson 1802
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Wisconsin Hunters Harassed and Shot At in Canada