Friday, February 19, 2010
Hunters for the Hungry
Every hunting season hunters across the nation fill their freezers with deer meat, but they don’t stop there, they also help struggling Americans by providing them with this quality nutritious food. In my home state of Virginia alone, 405,340 pounds were contributed to the needy during the 2009 hunting season through the Hunters for the Hungry program. That is 1.6 million quarter pound servings of a 100 percent natural, low fat, high protein food source. The program requires hunters to drop deer off at processing locations, there the “professional processors skin, cut, wrap and freeze the meat.” Each deer carries an average cost of forty dollars to process. For a mature deer approximately fifty pounds can be harvested, working out to a cost of eighty cents per pound. The cost is covered completely through charity. It is not supported through any state funding. Once the meat is processed it is supplied at no cost to the needy of Virginia, through food banks and other nonprofit organizations. The Hunters for the Hungry program could produce more venison, but they lack sufficient funds to do so. The long term goal for the program “is to make 500,000 pounds of venison available to the hungry annually.” The potential is there for this program to reach and exceed these levels with proper financial support.
Virginia’s Hunters for the Hungry program was started in 1991 and represents the most successful of these programs, but hunters in other states are doing their part as well. Every state employs some form of a program for hunters to assist the needy, and hunters readily provide. Pennsylvania’s Hunters Sharing the Harvest program provided nearly 200,000 meals to the disadvantaged of their state this past season, and Tennessee hunters donated 71,348 pounds of venison. Numbers such as these can be found all across the United States. Yearly these programs are expanding and donations are increasing. We cannot depend on the mainstream media outlets to help these programs grow, instead we should do what we can to raise awareness and help provide these programs with what they need to mature.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
New Article Coming Friday
Friday, January 8, 2010
Urban Fox
This past week I visited some family in Northern Virginia. Just before I departed to see them I received a predator mouth call that I had ordered in the mail. I couldn’t wait to try it out. The area I was visiting is in the suburbs and hunting is illegal. There is a large block of woods running adjacent to their property however, and in the past we had seen foxes there. So I brought the call along with me.
The neighbors might have found the squealing sound of a dying rabbit a little strange, but within five minutes of calling I spotted a large red fox trotting through the woods.
The call I’m using is Red River Bandit. I purchased it from redrivercalls.com. Aaron Glenn is a predator hunter and he has designed all the calls on this site. He has also posted videos that help show how he uses the calls successfully. The one I purchased is an open reed call. I have quickly learned it produces a very clear and loud sound with very little air pressure. Mouth calls I have used in the past have required a lot more air pressure to produce a similar sound.
The area I called, had no hunting pressure so the foxes are probably less skittish. Perhaps this is the reason one came in so quickly and during daylight hours. I cannot wait to try again in an area where hunting is permitted.
