A moral dilemma:
For a long time my moral code has been that I will only kill if I am going to eat my prey or to protect me and mine from immediate serious harm. I have hunted and fished since I was a child and have always been careful to kill humanely and with the utmost respect for the innocent life that I am taking.
I used to enjoy the thrill of the hunt and that short surge of adrenaline that flows when I was looking down the sights or swinging the shotgun to follow a bird. But no longer; I no longer enjoy the process.
And here’s the dilemma. We are overrun with grey squirrels this year and, although I know that shooting them is not the long-term solution nationally, I am torn between doing nothing and allowing them to do more damage. If I do nothing, we will lose more saplings (but they only really damage sycamore on my land) and, of course, they will take more nestlings and eggs. Can I justify shooting them to save the birds? Who am I to decide who should live or die? But then, the grey squirrel should never be here in the first place!! As the custodian of the land, should I feel morally obliged to control their numbers to protect the trees and the wildlife?
It’s not that I don’t eat them either, but there is a limit to how often you can eat squirrel satay, squirrel pie, or squirrel korma .
Maybe, the fact I do not enjoy killing is my penance for having to do it!
Some of you will be thinking "what's the fuss about; just get on with it!" and others will be questioning how I can justify hunting in the first place; I feel I'm between a rock and a hard place
For a long time my moral code has been that I will only kill if I am going to eat my prey or to protect me and mine from immediate serious harm. I have hunted and fished since I was a child and have always been careful to kill humanely and with the utmost respect for the innocent life that I am taking.
I used to enjoy the thrill of the hunt and that short surge of adrenaline that flows when I was looking down the sights or swinging the shotgun to follow a bird. But no longer; I no longer enjoy the process.
And here’s the dilemma. We are overrun with grey squirrels this year and, although I know that shooting them is not the long-term solution nationally, I am torn between doing nothing and allowing them to do more damage. If I do nothing, we will lose more saplings (but they only really damage sycamore on my land) and, of course, they will take more nestlings and eggs. Can I justify shooting them to save the birds? Who am I to decide who should live or die? But then, the grey squirrel should never be here in the first place!! As the custodian of the land, should I feel morally obliged to control their numbers to protect the trees and the wildlife?
It’s not that I don’t eat them either, but there is a limit to how often you can eat squirrel satay, squirrel pie, or squirrel korma .
Maybe, the fact I do not enjoy killing is my penance for having to do it!
Some of you will be thinking "what's the fuss about; just get on with it!" and others will be questioning how I can justify hunting in the first place; I feel I'm between a rock and a hard place