Author Topic: N.J. animal rights people are NUTS  (Read 711 times)

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Offline Gun Runner

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N.J. animal rights people are NUTS
« on: December 04, 2005, 09:03:43 PM »
VERNON, N.J. - New Jersey hunters take to the woods Monday for a controversial season aimed at thinning the state's growing population of black bears, whose hungry foraging has frightened suburban residents.  
 
Up to 5,000 hunters were expected to take part in the six-day hunt — only the second in New Jersey in 35 years — which begins at sunrise Monday.

John Rogalo planned to set out with his 12-year-old son to hunt in Allamuchy Mountain State Park.

"It's a chance to harvest a bear," said Rogalo, 47, of Stanhope, a self-employed contractor. "I just view hunting as a family tradition. I started at 10 with my Dad. Now my son will be with me."

Black bears have rebounded from near extinction in the state but the loss of habitat to development is forcing many of the animals to seek food in populated areas.

The hunt, restricted to an area of about 1,600 square miles in the state's northwest corner, is expected to draw thousands of hunters armed with shotguns or old-fashioned muzzle-loading rifles.

The hunt has been sharply criticized by animal rights advocates, who call it inhumane and went to court Friday in an unsuccessful bid to stop it.

"This hunt is not rooted in public safety," said Janine Motta, a spokeswoman for the New Jersey Animal Rights Alliance, which sued to stop the hunt. "It's rooted in providing a hunting opportunity, getting trophies for walls and rugs for floors."

But hunters and the state say the hunt — which coincides with white-tailed deer season — is necessary, given the bears' increasing incursions into backyards and trash cans.

"Most guys will just go deer hunting, but if they see a bear and there's an opportunity, they'll take it," said Frank Dara, chairman of the New Jersey State Federation of Sportsmen's Clubs. "It's basically a conservation thing. It's something that has to be done to control the number of bears."

The state's last bear hunt was in 2003, when 328 were killed. That was the first bear season since 1970, when hunts were suspended because the black bear population had dropped to about 100 animals.

Today, the population is estimated at 1,600 to 3,200 and complaints and sightings are up sharply all over the state.

Last July, a 142-pound female bear bit the leg of a sleeping camper at High Point State Park, in the state's still rural northwest corner. The camper's injuries were minor. The bear was shot by a state biologist.

A month earlier in Egg Harbor City, near Atlantic City in southern New Jersey, a 150-pound bruin rummaged through garbage cans, ate from bird feeders and jumped a fence a block from an elementary school during a weeklong stay.

Opponents of the bear hunt planned to gather at a weigh station in Wawayanda State Park, with teams also fanning out into the woods looking for bears that have been shot but not killed.

"It'll be volunteers looking to help any injured or wounded bears they come across, or fielding calls from the public for any wounded bears they find on their property," Motta said.


****Dont know about any of you folks, but the last thing I would try to do is put a "Sponge Bob" bandaid on a wounded bear.***


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Offline clodbuster

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animal rights
« Reply #1 on: December 05, 2005, 05:54:00 AM »
G-R  your title is redundant.  Rights are for people not animals.  I wish all the N.J. hunters good luck and wish I was there with them.
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Offline Graybeard

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N.J. animal rights people are NUTS
« Reply #2 on: December 05, 2005, 10:10:06 AM »
Actually I think the anti's should be encouraged to go over and offer help to ALL the wounded bears every where. Talk about cleaning out the gene pool.


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Offline Swamp Fox

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N.J. animal rights people are NUTS
« Reply #3 on: December 05, 2005, 11:03:57 AM »
That was my thought.
I can see a few doing their best Kwi Chang Kane "at one with nature" meditation and becomming a chew bone for an injured bear.
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Offline Brett

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N.J. animal rights people are NUTS
« Reply #4 on: December 05, 2005, 11:41:36 AM »
I would love to get a video of some of those nim-nod volunteers trying to assist a poor cuddly injured bear.   :eek:  :)
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Offline Nightrain52

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N.J. animal rights people are NUTS
« Reply #5 on: December 05, 2005, 03:56:01 PM »
It'll be volunteers looking to help any injured or wounded bears they come across.------- :-D  :)  :-D  :)  :-D  :)  :-D  :)  :-D  :)  I wonder what happens when the try to take the bears pulse. Sounds like Peta snackers to me.
FREEDOM IS WORTH FIGHTING FOR-ARE YOU WILLING TO DIE FOR IT--------IT'S HARD TO SOAR LIKE AN EAGLE WHEN YOU ARE SURROUNDED BY TURKEYS

Offline Gun Runner

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N.J. animal rights people are NUTS
« Reply #6 on: December 05, 2005, 05:10:53 PM »
Better yet Nightrain, wait till one of them trys to give the bear "Mouth to Mouth" I'ed fly back just to see that.  :twisted:

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Offline unspellable

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gene pool
« Reply #7 on: December 06, 2005, 02:39:41 AM »
I don't think that's going to do much to clean the gene pool as those eatern bears are rather small.  But still, such an encounter could be VERY educational for a PETA type.  maybe they could practice before hand, say by trying to push butter up a wildcat's behind with a hot poker.

Offline Nightrain52

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N.J. animal rights people are NUTS
« Reply #8 on: December 06, 2005, 04:44:36 AM »
:mrgreen:  :toast:  :D
FREEDOM IS WORTH FIGHTING FOR-ARE YOU WILLING TO DIE FOR IT--------IT'S HARD TO SOAR LIKE AN EAGLE WHEN YOU ARE SURROUNDED BY TURKEYS

Offline powderman

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N.J. animal rights people are NUTS
« Reply #9 on: December 06, 2005, 04:38:10 PM »
HEHEHEHE. I'd love to see them help wounded bears, at least the gene pool will be cleaned a bit. POWDERMAN.  :-D  :-D  :-D  :-D  :-D  :-D
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