Thursday, September 10, 2009

A shoot-first mentality in the suburbs

PETA is trying to stop a planned bowhunt of deer in a Leesburg, Va., community. Read about it here:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/08/AR2009090803886.html

Granted, the deer population in Northern Virginia is out of control. I saw a fawn in a park near my home in Sterling recently. It was alone and calling out to its mother. I presumed the fawn was lost or perhaps the mother died on Algonkian Parkway like so many other deer. The parkway runs along a highly residential area that hugs the Potomac River. Drivers consistently speed along this stretch of road and kill deer almost daily. It was heartbreaking to see a tiny animal wondering around making such a distressed sound, knowing its mom had probably perished under the wheels of a BMW or Lexus in this affluent, self-absorbed area of the state.

I saw an adult deer once that must have been hit by a car before I passed by it on Route 7 near Reston. It was still alive and sitting up in an awkward position, twisted and totally stunned, and probably about to die. Again, a very distressing thing to see. I still remember the look in its eyes that reflected the glare from my headlights.

But shooting deer with arrows in a subdivision doesn't appear very smart or humane to me. I must agree with PETA's stance on this. There should be a better way to solve the problem.

It seems every time there is a wildlife issue anywhere in this country, man's first choice is to shoot it. Sometimes wildlife is an inconvenience to us, so we rather blast away than have our rose gardens disrupted. We don't like when those damn geese poop on our pristine walking paths, either. Often, we pretend that burying an arrow or bullet in the skull of an animal is somehow good for nature. Of course, it's not so good when the hunter misses and the animal runs off with a wounded leg and slowly bleeds out over 12 or 24 hours.

We like to pride ourselves on being the smartest creatures on the planet, but never seem to want to stretch our imaginations too much to solve problems (often ones which we created in the first place) in less violent manners.

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