Tuesday, November 15, 2011

SAD DAYS FOR SANDHILL CRANES IN KENTUCKY


FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - Hunters interested in participating in Kentucky's first sandhill crane season can begin applying for permits.


The Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources said it will take applications for permits from Nov. 15 through Nov. 30 and hold a drawing Dec. 5 to select up to 400 hunters.


Hunters are allowed to take up to two sandhill cranes and must register them with the department. The hunt will begin Dec. 17 and continue through Jan. 15, 2012, or until hunters take 400 birds.


It will be the first hunting season for sandhill cranes in a state east of the Mississippi in a century. The birds were nearly extinct in the early 1900s because of overhunting, but officials say the populations have rebounded enough to allow a limited hunting season.


For a look at what the cranes are like, please go to Vickie Henderson's blog and see her information and photos. 
 http://vickiehenderson.blogspot.com/2011/07/intimate-visits-with-sandhill-crane.html
Vickie kept the petitions going through her blog and all those who read it, back in the summer.  Sadly, we didn't get enough signatures or letter or phone calls to make a difference.

I have uncles in my family who hunt, but aren't deer and turkey enough? 
Can you even eat a sandhill crane?  Is this just for sport?
Because the population, which had gone nearly extinct, is rebounding? 

There are very few areas in the U.S.  (but I admit, there are some in Kentucky) where you have to hunt to eat, to feed your family, to survive. 
What harm are the cranes doing that legislation in Kentucky thinks we need
to "cull" them;
to "take" them;
which means to KILL THEM?

3 comments:

Carol Blackburn said...

Aw, how sad. They should only be shot with a camera in my opinion.

RH Carpenter said...

I can't understand killing for sport. Sweetie says the hunters could eat them - but why? Perhaps the farmers in the area don't understand the power of birders: if they got the word out about the cranes and when they are viewable, birders would go who can't travel to Idaho or New Mexico to see them, causing revenue to hotels and restaurants and gas stations in the area.

Jane said...

I'm with you Rhonda...hate hunting, I don't understand it...killing for fun or sport ( !!!).