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{{short description|Hunting term}}
{{improve categories|date=October 2015}}
'''Fair chase''' is a term used by hunters to describe an ethical hunt. North America's oldest wildlife conservation group, the [[Boone and Crockett Club]], defines “'''fair chase'''”<ref name="Boone and Crockett Club">{{cite web|title=Fair Chase Statement|url=https://www.boone-crockett.org/huntingEthics/ethics_fairchase.asp?area=huntingEthics|website=Boone and Crockett Club}}</ref> as requiring hunted big game animals to be “wild and free-ranging.” Wild refers to an animal that is naturally bred and lives in nature. Free-ranging, as defined by the Club, means an animal is “unrestricted within its biological home range, has adequate protective cover, and reasonable opportunity to elude the hunter.” A game animal’s biological home range is generally understood as the geographic area where an animal roams to find food, water, shelter, and to reproduce. Biological home range will vary from species to species and depend on available habitat. It is a concept of animal behavior and ecology that is very difficult to model or measure accurately.


'''Fair chase''' is a term used by [[hunter]]s to describe an [[ethical]] approach to [[big game hunting|hunting big game animals]]. [[North America]]'s oldest [[wildlife conservation]] group, the [[Boone and Crockett Club]], defines "fair chase" as requiring the targeted [[game animal]] to be wild and free-ranging.<ref name="Boone and Crockett Club">{{cite web|title=Fair Chase Statement|url=https://www.boone-crockett.org/huntingEthics/ethics_fairchase.asp?area=huntingEthics|website=Boone and Crockett Club}}</ref> "Wild" refers to an animal that is naturally bred and lives freely in nature. "Free-ranging" means an animal that is not restrained by [[trapping|trap]]s or artificial barriers, so it has a fair chance of successfully escaping from the hunt.
Fair chase has been the honor code of North American hunters for over a century and the principle underlying many of North American hunting laws, and is taught to new hunters in hunter certification courses.


Fair chase has been the [[honor system|honor code]] of North American hunters for over a century and the principle underlying many [[hunting laws]], and is taught to new hunters in [[hunting license|hunter certification]] courses.
The literal meaning of fair chase is complicated by the fact that “fair” has many meanings and uses in the English language, e.g., fair ball, fair weather, fair skin, fair chance, fair play. When the word “fair” is paired with “chase,” it implies hunting is fair or equal. Hunting is not a field sport like baseball or football where the participants agree to the rules of engagement beforehand. In hunting, the hunted has not agreed to anything, nor does it have an equal chance in most cases to kill the human hunter. For most species, escape is the only option. Therefore, the meaning of fair chase is based on the definition of “fair” that relates to legitimate, honorable, genuine, or appropriate in the circumstances. To complicate matters further, fair chase is associated with the notion of sport hunting in the minds of many hunters, even though it does not resemble any sport played on a field or court. There is only one willing participant in hunting and the competition is not between groups of people. The term “sport,” in hunting, means only a sporting approach or a sporting chance, which are the principles behind fair chase. That approach recognizes the advantage of human capabilities, including technologies, and represents a desire to constrain ourselves so as to give the animals pursued a chance to escape.

Fair Chase is also a [[registered trademark]] of the [[Boone and Crockett Club]].


==History==
==History==
The concept and the popularization of the term "fair chase" is credited to [[Theodore Roosevelt]] and perpetuated by the Boone and Crockett Club, a conservation organization of Roosevelt's creation.<ref>{{cite web|title=Minutes from first meeting of the Boone and Crockett Club|url=http://cdm103401.cdmhost.com/cdm/singleitem/collection/p16013coll13/id/51/rec/10|website=Montana Memory Project - University of Montana Mansfield Library|publisher=Boone and Crockett Club|access-date=2015-09-30|archive-date=2016-03-04|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304053904/http://cdm103401.cdmhost.com/cdm/singleitem/collection/p16013coll13/id/51/rec/10|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Mauro|first1=Anthony|title=The New Age Hunter|date=2004|publisher=iUniverse, Inc.|isbn=0-595-32316-2|page=35}}<!--|accessdate=13 October 2015--></ref>


===European aristocratic roots===
The concept and the popularization of the term "fair chase" is credited to [[Theodore Roosevelt]] and perpetuated by the [[Boone and Crockett Club]], a conservation organization of Roosevelt's creation.<ref>{{cite web|title=Minutes from first meeting of the Boone and Crockett Club|url=http://cdm103401.cdmhost.com/cdm/singleitem/collection/p16013coll13/id/51/rec/10|website=Montana Memory Project - University of Montana Mansfield Library|publisher=Boone and Crockett Club}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Mauro|first1=Anthony|title=The New Age Hunter|date=2004|publisher=iUniverse, Inc.|isbn=0-595-32316-2|page=35|accessdate=13 October 2015}}</ref>


Ethics, or a code of conduct, in hunting first emerged centuries ago among European hunters who were primarily the wealthy landowners and royalty. While the commoner hunted to stay alive, the aristocrat [[Sport hunting|hunted for sport]], and it was this sporting approach that separated the two. These ethics did not transfer to the majority of immigrants that settled in the [[New World]]. Basic human survival and commercial enterprises often overlooked any hunting ethics. After two hundred years of unregulated hunting by recreational and commercial market hunters, the negative effects were severe. By the end of this "era of extermination", wildlife and especially big game populations were in drastic condition. Some species had already been lost to extinction, many others were on the edge of it.{{citation needed|date=May 2020}}
The earliest recorded North American usage of the term “Fair Chase” is in the fifth article of the [[Boone and Crockett Club]] constitution, adopted in February of 1888. At this time in history there were no laws governing the talking of game for food or for sport. Water-killing deer (driving deer with hounds or pushers into lakes where shooters waited in boats to either shot, club or cut the throats of deer) was also a widespread practice, especially in the [[Adirondack mountains]].


In the early part of the 20th century, a sense of pride and accomplishment began to emerge among sportsmen that came with their newly accepted responsibility to conserve. Doing right by the game being hunted meant working with conservation and population recovery efforts, including the creation of the [[National Wildlife Refuge System]]. As for the hunt itself, using restraint shifted the emphasis of measuring success from the quantity of game taken to the quality of the chase. The hunting experience became more important than the number killed, and success was now more memorable because the hunting experience became sustainable in the long term.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Richard J. Ladle|first1=Robert J. Whittaker|title=Conservation Biogeography|date=2011|publisher=Blackwell Publishing LTD|location=West Sussex, UK|isbn=978-1-4443-3503-3}}<!--|accessdate=13 October 2015--></ref>
Article X of the Club’s constitution declared that the killing of game while swimming was an “offense” for which a member may be suspended or expelled from the Club.<ref>{{cite web|title=Boone and Crockett Archive|url=http://cdm103401.cdmhost.com/cdm/singleitem/collection/p16013coll13/id/96/rec/1|website=Montana Memory Project - University of Montana Mansfield Library|publisher=Boone and Crockett Club}}</ref> Later writings by Club members [[Theodore Roosevelt]], [[George Bird Grinnell]], and [[Aldo Leopold]] articulated the term “fair chase” to the public through books and magazine articles. Most notable of these where the Club’s Acorn book series on hunting (1893 – 1933), Leopold’s ''[[Sand County Almanac]]''<ref>{{cite book|last1=Leopold|first1=Aldo|title=Sand County Almanac|date=1942|publisher=Oxford University Press|page=226}}</ref> and Grinnell’s ''[[Forest and Stream]]'' magazine now ''[[Field & Stream]]''.


===Development and definition===
In 1893, [[Theodore Roosevelt]] wrote about hunting and fair chase in his book titled ''The Wilderness Hunter''.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Roosevelt|first1=Theodore|title=The Wilderness hunter|date=1893|publisher=G.P Putnam's Sons|location=New York, New York|pages=44–45}}</ref>


The earliest recorded North American usage of the term "fair chase" is in the fifth article of the Boone and Crockett Club constitution, adopted in February 1888. At this time in American history, there were no laws governing the taking of game for food or for sport. Water-killing deer (driving deer with hounds or pushers into lakes where hunters waited in boats to either shoot, club, or cut the throats of deer) was a widespread practice, especially in the [[Adirondack Mountains]].
The history of the [[Teddy Bear]] has a close connection to fair chase. During his presidency in 1902, [[Theodore Roosevelt]] was in Mississippi to settle a border dispute. His hosts knew Roosevelt was an avid hunter and arranged for a black bear hunt for the President. In the thick brush swamps of Mississippi it was a common practice of the day to hunt bears with hounds. With concern for the President's safety the guides insisted that he stay in camp until a bear was brought to bay by the hounds. A small bear was caught and tied to a tree. When Roosevelt arrived at the scene he refused to shoot the defenseless animal. Being omitted from the chase was unsettling to Roosevelt who prided himself in living the hardy life of an outdoorsmen – the harder the hunt the better. He did not earn this bear though a fair pursuit. Political cartoonist [[Clifford Berryman]] immediately drew a cartoon depicting Roosevelt refusing to shoot the restrained bear. The story made national headlines and a shopkeeper, Morris Michtom in Brooklyn, New York, had his wife sew a stuffed bear to sell in his store. He wrote the Roosevelt asking permission to call the child's toy, Teddy's Bear. Roosevelt gave his permission, and history was made.<ref name="Real Teddy Bear Story">{{cite web|title=Real Teddy Bear Story|url=http://www.theodoreroosevelt.org/site/c.elKSIdOWIiJ8H/b.8684621/k.6632/Real_Teddy_Bear_Story.htm|website=Theodore Roosevelt Association|publisher=Theodore Roosevelt Association|accessdate=13 October 2015}}</ref>


Article X of the club's constitution declared that the killing of game while swimming was an "offense" for which a member may be suspended or expelled from the club.<ref>{{cite web|title=Boone and Crockett Archive|url=http://cdm103401.cdmhost.com/cdm/singleitem/collection/p16013coll13/id/96/rec/1|website=Montana Memory Project - University of Montana Mansfield Library|publisher=Boone and Crockett Club|access-date=2015-09-30|archive-date=2016-04-26|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160426071454/http://cdm103401.cdmhost.com/cdm/singleitem/collection/p16013coll13/id/96/rec/1|url-status=dead}}</ref> Later writings by club members Roosevelt, [[George Bird Grinnell]], and [[Aldo Leopold]] articulated the term "fair chase" to the public through books and magazine articles. Most notable of these were the club's Acorn book series on hunting (1893 – 1933), Leopold's ''[[Sand County Almanac]]'',<ref>{{cite book|last1=Leopold|first1=Aldo|title=Sand County Almanac|date=1942|publisher=Oxford University Press|page=226}}</ref> and Grinnell's ''[[Forest and Stream]]'' magazine (now ''[[Field & Stream]]'').
Ethics, or a code of conduct in hunting first emerged centuries ago among European hunters who were primarily the wealthy landowners and royalty. While the commoner hunted to stay alive, the aristocrat hunted for sport, and it was this sporting approach that separated the two. These ethics did not transfer to the majority of immigrants that settled in the New World. Mere human survival and commercial enterprises had no room for a hunting ethic. After two hundred years of the unregulated taking of wildlife by subsistence, recreational, and commercial market hunters, the negative effects were inescapable. By the end of this “era of extermination, wildlife and especially big game populations were in dismal condition. Some species had already been lost to extinction and others were on the edge of being lost forever.


In 1893, Roosevelt wrote about hunting and fair chase in his book titled ''The Wilderness Hunter''.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Roosevelt|first1=Theodore|title=The Wilderness hunter|date=1893|publisher=G.P Putnam's Sons|location=New York, New York|pages=44–45}}</ref>
In the early part of the 20th century, there began to emerge a sense of pride and accomplishment among sportsmen that came with their newly accepted responsibility to conserve. Doing right by the game being hunted meant working with conservation and population recovery efforts. These efforts included the creation of the [[National Wildlife Refuge System]]. As for the hunt itself, using restraint shifted the emphasis of measuring success, from the quantity of game taken, to the quality of the chase. The hunting experience became more important than the number killed, and success was now more memorable because the hunting experience became sustainable in the long term.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Richard J. Ladle|first1=Robert J. Whittaker|title=Conservation Biogeography|date=2011|publisher=Blackwell Publishing LTD|location=West Sussex, UK|isbn=978-1-4443-3503-3|accessdate=13 October 2015}}</ref>

===The teddy bear's connection===

[[File:TheodoreRooseveltTeddyBear.jpg|thumb|Clifford Berryman's cartoon]]

The history of the [[teddy bear]] has a close connection to fair chase. During his presidency in 1902, Roosevelt was in Mississippi to settle a border dispute. His hosts knew Roosevelt was an avid hunter and arranged for a black bear hunt for the president. In the thick brush swamps of Mississippi it was a common practice of the day to hunt bears with hounds. Out of concern for the president's safety, the guides insisted that he stay in camp until a bear was brought to bay by the hounds, and subsequently a small bear was caught and tied to a tree. When Roosevelt arrived at the scene he refused to shoot the defenseless animal.<ref name="Real Teddy Bear Story"/>

Being omitted from the chase was unsettling to Roosevelt, who prided himself in living the hardy life of an [[outdoorsman]]—the harder the hunt the better—and he did not earn this bear though a fair pursuit. Political cartoonist [[Clifford Berryman]] immediately drew a cartoon depicting Roosevelt refusing to shoot the restrained bear. The story made national headlines and a shopkeeper, Morris Michtom in Brooklyn, New York, had his wife sew a stuffed bear to sell in his store. He wrote Roosevelt asking permission to call the child's toy "Teddy's Bear", and he consented.<ref name="Real Teddy Bear Story">{{cite web|title=Real Teddy Bear Story|url=https://www.theodoreroosevelt.org/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=991271&module_id=333084|website=Theodore Roosevelt Association|publisher=Theodore Roosevelt Association|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200605164924/https://www.theodoreroosevelt.org/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=991271&module_id=333084|archive-date=June 5, 2020|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=The Story of the Teddy Bear - Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site|publisher=[[National Park Service]]|url=https://www.nps.gov/thrb/learn/historyculture/storyofteddybear.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200605165202/https://www.nps.gov/thrb/learn/historyculture/storyofteddybear.htm|archive-date=June 5, 2020|url-status=live}}</ref>


==Fair chase today==
==Fair chase today==


When in the field, the initial question for every fair chase hunter is whether the animal has a reasonable opportunity to elude the hunter. If the animal does not, the hunt can never be “fair chase. A fair chase hunter does not shoot an animal hampered by deep snow or entangled in a barbwire fence. Another characteristic of a fair chase hunter is the knowledge their first shot will be true, as compared to a person who aims, fires, and merely hopes for success. Choosing to loose an arrow or fire a bullet is final. There is no calling it back. With so much left up to the individual at the moment immediately before a weapon discharges, there is much responsibility that comes along with that decision.
When in the field, the initial question for every fair chase hunter is whether the animal has a reasonable opportunity to elude the hunter. If the animal does not, the hunt can never be "fair chase". For example, a fair chase hunter does not shoot an animal hampered by deep snow or entangled in a barbed-wire fence.

There are also laws that regulate hunting. Ethical, fair chase hunting therefore begins with obeying game laws. A fair chase hunter must acquaint themselves with the laws that govern hunting, as they reflect considerations for safety, the sustainable use of the wildlife resources, and the minimum level of conduct that the public will tolerate in a particular state, province, region, or country. If something is illegal it cannot, by definition, be fair chase. On the other hand, just because something is legal does not make it fair chase.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Posewitz|first1=James|title=Beyond Fair Chase|date=1994|publisher=Falcon Press Publishing|location=Helena, Montana|isbn=1-56044-302-2}}<!--|accessdate=13 October 2015--></ref>

There are certain aspects of fair chase hunting that extend beyond written laws. For example, shooting at a running deer is not illegal, nor are there any laws regarding shooting at extremely long ranges with a firearm or bow. To those who believe in the responsibility to kill quickly and cleanly, taking such risky shots would be unethical. A large part of the time-honored tradition of hunting has to do with the fact that sportsmen police themselves and others both within and beyond the rule of law.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Posewitz|first1=James|title=Beyond Fair Chase|date=1994|publisher=Falcon Press Publishing|location=Helena, Montana|isbn=1-56044-302-2}}<!--|accessdate=13 October 2015--></ref>

"Canned shoots", also known as "[[canned hunting]]", may be legal in some North American states and provinces, but they are not representative of fair chase. Canned shoots involve the "pursuit" and killing of a big game animal kept in or released from captivity to be shot in an artificial hunting situation where a kill is virtually guaranteed.<ref>{{cite book|last1=DeMello|first1=Margo|title=Animals and Society: An Introduction to Human-Animal Studies|date=2012|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=978-0-231-15294-5|page=74}}<!--|accessdate=13 October 2015--></ref>

When [[Internet hunting]] was introduced in 2005, allowing people to hunt over the Internet using remotely controlled guns, the practice was widely criticized by hunters as violating the principles of fair chase. A spokesperson of the [[National Rifle Association of America]] (NRA) stated, "The NRA has always maintained that fair chase, being in the field with your firearm or bow, is an important element of hunting tradition. Sitting at your desk in front of your computer, clicking at a mouse, has nothing to do with hunting."<ref name=HSUS-FactSheet>Humane Society Wildlife Abuse Campaign, [http://www.humanesociety.org/issues/internet_hunting/facts/internet_hunting_fact_sheet.html#.UzjiW61dW9Y Fact Sheet on Internet Hunting]</ref>


The Pope and Young Club, a US-based organization that promotes bowhunting, declares that a fair chase shall not involve the taking of animals under the following conditions:
Laws regulate hunting. Ethical, fair chase hunting therefore begins with obeying game laws. A fair chase hunter must acquaint themselves with the laws that govern hunting, as they reflect considerations for safety, the sustainable use of the wildlife resources, and the minimum level of conduct that the public will tolerate in a particular state, province, region, or country. If something is illegal it cannot, by definition, be fair chase. On the other hand, just because something is legal does not make it fair chase. There are certain aspects of fair chase hunting that extend beyond written laws. For example, shooting at a running deer is not illegal, nor is there any laws regarding shooting at extremely long ranges with a firearm or bow. To those who believe in the responsibility to kill quickly and cleanly, taking such risky shots would be unethical. These are the personal choices of hunting that cannot and should not be regulated. The legitimacy of any activity should be in question if every aspect has to be thoroughly regulated by laws. A large part of the time-honored tradition of hunting has to do with the fact that sportsmen police themselves and others both within and beyond the rule of law.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Posewitz|first1=James|title=Beyond Fair Chase|date=1994|publisher=Falcon Press Publishing|location=Helena, Montana|isbn=1-56044-302-2|accessdate=13 October 2015}}</ref>
* Helplessly in a [[Trapping#Trap types|trap]], struggling in deep [[snow]], [[mud]] or [[water]], or on [[ice]].
* By "[[spotlighting|jacklighting]]" or blind-shining at night.
* By the use of any [[tranquilizer]]s or [[poison]]s.
* While inside escape-proof fenced enclosures.
* From any powered [[vehicle]] or [[powerboat]].
* By the use of any powered vehicle or powerboat for herding or driving animals, including use of [[aircraft]] to land alongside or to communicate with or direct a hunter on the ground.
* By the use of [[electronic device]]s for attracting, locating or pursuing game or guiding the hunter to such game, or by the use of a [[bow and arrow]] to which any electronic device is attached with the exception of lighted nocks and recording devices that cast no light towards the target and do not aid in rangefinding, sighting or shooting the bow.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://pope-young.org/Fair-Chase |title=Fair Chase |publisher=Pope and Young Club |location=[[Chatfield, Minnesota]] |access-date=September 19, 2023}}</ref>


==See also==
“Canned shoots” also known as "[[canned hunting]]" may be legal in some North American states and provinces, but they are not representative of fair chase or even hunting. Canned shoots (or canned hunting) involves the “pursuit” and killing of any big game animal kept in or released from captivity to be shoot in an artificial or bogus hunting situation where a kill is virtually guaranteed.<ref>{{cite book|last1=DeMello|first1=Margo|title=Animals and Society: An Introduction to Human-Animal Studies|date=2012|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=978-0-231-15294-5|page=74|accessdate=13 October 2015}}</ref>
* [[Turkey shoot]]


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:Hunting]]
[[Category:Hunting]]
[[Category:Hunting in the United States]]
[[Category:Ethical principles]]
[[Category:Ethical principles]]
[[Category:Animal rights]]
[[Category:Animal rights]]

Latest revision as of 07:47, 30 March 2024

Fair chase is a term used by hunters to describe an ethical approach to hunting big game animals. North America's oldest wildlife conservation group, the Boone and Crockett Club, defines "fair chase" as requiring the targeted game animal to be wild and free-ranging.[1] "Wild" refers to an animal that is naturally bred and lives freely in nature. "Free-ranging" means an animal that is not restrained by traps or artificial barriers, so it has a fair chance of successfully escaping from the hunt.

Fair chase has been the honor code of North American hunters for over a century and the principle underlying many hunting laws, and is taught to new hunters in hunter certification courses.

Fair Chase is also a registered trademark of the Boone and Crockett Club.

History

[edit]

The concept and the popularization of the term "fair chase" is credited to Theodore Roosevelt and perpetuated by the Boone and Crockett Club, a conservation organization of Roosevelt's creation.[2][3]

European aristocratic roots

[edit]

Ethics, or a code of conduct, in hunting first emerged centuries ago among European hunters who were primarily the wealthy landowners and royalty. While the commoner hunted to stay alive, the aristocrat hunted for sport, and it was this sporting approach that separated the two. These ethics did not transfer to the majority of immigrants that settled in the New World. Basic human survival and commercial enterprises often overlooked any hunting ethics. After two hundred years of unregulated hunting by recreational and commercial market hunters, the negative effects were severe. By the end of this "era of extermination", wildlife and especially big game populations were in drastic condition. Some species had already been lost to extinction, many others were on the edge of it.[citation needed]

In the early part of the 20th century, a sense of pride and accomplishment began to emerge among sportsmen that came with their newly accepted responsibility to conserve. Doing right by the game being hunted meant working with conservation and population recovery efforts, including the creation of the National Wildlife Refuge System. As for the hunt itself, using restraint shifted the emphasis of measuring success from the quantity of game taken to the quality of the chase. The hunting experience became more important than the number killed, and success was now more memorable because the hunting experience became sustainable in the long term.[4]

Development and definition

[edit]

The earliest recorded North American usage of the term "fair chase" is in the fifth article of the Boone and Crockett Club constitution, adopted in February 1888. At this time in American history, there were no laws governing the taking of game for food or for sport. Water-killing deer (driving deer with hounds or pushers into lakes where hunters waited in boats to either shoot, club, or cut the throats of deer) was a widespread practice, especially in the Adirondack Mountains.

Article X of the club's constitution declared that the killing of game while swimming was an "offense" for which a member may be suspended or expelled from the club.[5] Later writings by club members Roosevelt, George Bird Grinnell, and Aldo Leopold articulated the term "fair chase" to the public through books and magazine articles. Most notable of these were the club's Acorn book series on hunting (1893 – 1933), Leopold's Sand County Almanac,[6] and Grinnell's Forest and Stream magazine (now Field & Stream).

In 1893, Roosevelt wrote about hunting and fair chase in his book titled The Wilderness Hunter.[7]

The teddy bear's connection

[edit]
Clifford Berryman's cartoon

The history of the teddy bear has a close connection to fair chase. During his presidency in 1902, Roosevelt was in Mississippi to settle a border dispute. His hosts knew Roosevelt was an avid hunter and arranged for a black bear hunt for the president. In the thick brush swamps of Mississippi it was a common practice of the day to hunt bears with hounds. Out of concern for the president's safety, the guides insisted that he stay in camp until a bear was brought to bay by the hounds, and subsequently a small bear was caught and tied to a tree. When Roosevelt arrived at the scene he refused to shoot the defenseless animal.[8]

Being omitted from the chase was unsettling to Roosevelt, who prided himself in living the hardy life of an outdoorsman—the harder the hunt the better—and he did not earn this bear though a fair pursuit. Political cartoonist Clifford Berryman immediately drew a cartoon depicting Roosevelt refusing to shoot the restrained bear. The story made national headlines and a shopkeeper, Morris Michtom in Brooklyn, New York, had his wife sew a stuffed bear to sell in his store. He wrote Roosevelt asking permission to call the child's toy "Teddy's Bear", and he consented.[8][9]

Fair chase today

[edit]

When in the field, the initial question for every fair chase hunter is whether the animal has a reasonable opportunity to elude the hunter. If the animal does not, the hunt can never be "fair chase". For example, a fair chase hunter does not shoot an animal hampered by deep snow or entangled in a barbed-wire fence.

There are also laws that regulate hunting. Ethical, fair chase hunting therefore begins with obeying game laws. A fair chase hunter must acquaint themselves with the laws that govern hunting, as they reflect considerations for safety, the sustainable use of the wildlife resources, and the minimum level of conduct that the public will tolerate in a particular state, province, region, or country. If something is illegal it cannot, by definition, be fair chase. On the other hand, just because something is legal does not make it fair chase.[10]

There are certain aspects of fair chase hunting that extend beyond written laws. For example, shooting at a running deer is not illegal, nor are there any laws regarding shooting at extremely long ranges with a firearm or bow. To those who believe in the responsibility to kill quickly and cleanly, taking such risky shots would be unethical. A large part of the time-honored tradition of hunting has to do with the fact that sportsmen police themselves and others both within and beyond the rule of law.[11]

"Canned shoots", also known as "canned hunting", may be legal in some North American states and provinces, but they are not representative of fair chase. Canned shoots involve the "pursuit" and killing of a big game animal kept in or released from captivity to be shot in an artificial hunting situation where a kill is virtually guaranteed.[12]

When Internet hunting was introduced in 2005, allowing people to hunt over the Internet using remotely controlled guns, the practice was widely criticized by hunters as violating the principles of fair chase. A spokesperson of the National Rifle Association of America (NRA) stated, "The NRA has always maintained that fair chase, being in the field with your firearm or bow, is an important element of hunting tradition. Sitting at your desk in front of your computer, clicking at a mouse, has nothing to do with hunting."[13]

The Pope and Young Club, a US-based organization that promotes bowhunting, declares that a fair chase shall not involve the taking of animals under the following conditions:

  • Helplessly in a trap, struggling in deep snow, mud or water, or on ice.
  • By "jacklighting" or blind-shining at night.
  • By the use of any tranquilizers or poisons.
  • While inside escape-proof fenced enclosures.
  • From any powered vehicle or powerboat.
  • By the use of any powered vehicle or powerboat for herding or driving animals, including use of aircraft to land alongside or to communicate with or direct a hunter on the ground.
  • By the use of electronic devices for attracting, locating or pursuing game or guiding the hunter to such game, or by the use of a bow and arrow to which any electronic device is attached with the exception of lighted nocks and recording devices that cast no light towards the target and do not aid in rangefinding, sighting or shooting the bow.[14]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Fair Chase Statement". Boone and Crockett Club.
  2. ^ "Minutes from first meeting of the Boone and Crockett Club". Montana Memory Project - University of Montana Mansfield Library. Boone and Crockett Club. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
  3. ^ Mauro, Anthony (2004). The New Age Hunter. iUniverse, Inc. p. 35. ISBN 0-595-32316-2.
  4. ^ Richard J. Ladle, Robert J. Whittaker (2011). Conservation Biogeography. West Sussex, UK: Blackwell Publishing LTD. ISBN 978-1-4443-3503-3.
  5. ^ "Boone and Crockett Archive". Montana Memory Project - University of Montana Mansfield Library. Boone and Crockett Club. Archived from the original on 2016-04-26. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
  6. ^ Leopold, Aldo (1942). Sand County Almanac. Oxford University Press. p. 226.
  7. ^ Roosevelt, Theodore (1893). The Wilderness hunter. New York, New York: G.P Putnam's Sons. pp. 44–45.
  8. ^ a b "Real Teddy Bear Story". Theodore Roosevelt Association. Theodore Roosevelt Association. Archived from the original on June 5, 2020.
  9. ^ "The Story of the Teddy Bear - Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site". National Park Service. Archived from the original on June 5, 2020.
  10. ^ Posewitz, James (1994). Beyond Fair Chase. Helena, Montana: Falcon Press Publishing. ISBN 1-56044-302-2.
  11. ^ Posewitz, James (1994). Beyond Fair Chase. Helena, Montana: Falcon Press Publishing. ISBN 1-56044-302-2.
  12. ^ DeMello, Margo (2012). Animals and Society: An Introduction to Human-Animal Studies. Columbia University Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-231-15294-5.
  13. ^ Humane Society Wildlife Abuse Campaign, Fact Sheet on Internet Hunting
  14. ^ "Fair Chase". Chatfield, Minnesota: Pope and Young Club. Retrieved September 19, 2023.