Well we made it through Thanksgiving folks and I don’t know about you but I am even coming out of my turkey and mashed potatoes coma earlier than usual. (How is it that we can eat like that once a year, swear we will not do it again next year then of course we do, all over again.) So I need to say that I am thankful for that, having more than enough food for me and my family and others around me. As many of you know there are a lot of places in this world where that is not the case, many people go to bed hungry much of the time.
So I am thankful for having all that I can eat, and much more every day of my life. While we are talking about this thankfulness thing, in my usual not so humble opinion, people being thankful for things is a commodity that is in short supply these days, the truth is we are just plain spoiled. So in thinking about all this it occurs to me that we have a lot to be thankful for in the hunting and fishing and outdoor world. You don’t think so? Bear with me for minute.
Even though I am one of those old baby boomers I heard those older than me go on about the “good ol days” of hunting and fishing for much of my life. The old timers claimed that the game populations were much better back then and all of the game animals were in short, much more plentiful. Looking at when this golden time would have been, for the hunters that I am talking about, we would at least be going back to the 1950’s maybe the 60’s and even before that. Truth is, if you start with the deer populations, at least in the southeast, there is no comparison to then and now. “Back in the day” as my older buds would say, there were simply not any deer in many locales. Many of those my age can well remember the first deer or even deer track that they saw. If someone actually bagged a deer in those days, he was an instant hero and often the buck would be paraded around on a car fender or truck bed for all to see. Many who are adults now can recall standing and gazing at the mythical deer as a wide eyed child.
All of this changed in the 70’s and going into the 80’s, deer numbers skyrocketed with populations growing to heights that were even higher than they are today. Almost overnight deer seemed to be everywhere and where they were once held in awe, now many considered them a pest in their gardens and dodging them on the highway. How soon we forget, but I am thankful to live in a time when deer are plentiful.
Same with the king of gamebirds, the Eastern Wild Turkey populations plunged to almost extinct levels after the turn of the century. (the 1900’s) Modern conservation practices, especially the advent of the cannon net to capture native wild turkeys and transplant them to other areas really caused the turkey population to explode. Like the deer, turkeys were more populous 20 years ago than they are now. I’m thankful to have lived in a time when there was lots of turkeys.
We live in great country. For all of it’s faults and slings and arrows from its many detractors the United States of America is still the greatest country in the world. We have so much freedom in so many areas and we take it all for granted. One area I am very thankful for is our freedom under the Second Amendment. We enjoy much freedom, as we should, to own guns for hunting and shooting sports and home defense. Although it seems there are those who are working every day to take away the rights we have to keep and bear arms, so far we have prevailed under the Second Amendment. I am thankful for that.
I am very thankful for the amount of public land that we enjoy in this country. Many of us would have nowhere to go for hunting and fishing and just getting lost in the wild were it not for the vast amount of public land we have here. There are thousands, no millions of acers of public land in many states for you to take advantage of, if you have not done so, get a map and start scheming where you can go in your area. You may be amazed at the number of Forest Service and Public Hunting Areas you have to chose from. I am thankful for that.
Well as usual I have gone on too long, but maybe you get the idea. We have a lot to be thankful for as hunters and fishermen and sportsmen. Think about that a little bit as you are working you way through all those Thanksgiving leftovers. (The turkey on dinner roll sandwiches is my favorite)
Larry Case