Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.
For the good name of the state, and the ethical standing of its sportsmen, as an example to other states, and the last remaining duty toward our wild life, the odious automatic and pump shotguns should be barred from use in hunting, unless their capacity is reduced to two shots without reloading.

* * * * *

CHAPTER XXXI

NEW LAWS NEEDED IN THE STATES
(Concluded)

NORTH CAROLINA: 

The game laws of North Carolina form a droll crazy-quilt of local and state measures, effective and ineffective.  In 1909, a total of 77 local game laws were enacted, and only two of state-wide application.  During the ten years ending in 1910, a total of 316 game laws were enacted!  She sedulously endeavors to protect her quail, which do not migrate, but in Currituck County she persistently maintains the bloodiest slaughter-pen for waterfowl that exists anywhere on the Atlantic Coast.  There is no bag limit on waterfowl, and unlimited spring shooting.  So far as waterfowl are concerned, conditions could hardly be worse, except by the use of punt guns.  Doves, larks and robins are shot and eaten as “game” from November 1 to March 1!  Twenty-one counties have local restrictions on the sale of game, but the state at large has only one,—­on quail.

The market gunners of Currituck Sound are a scourge and a pest to the wild-fowl life of the Atlantic Coast.  For their own money profit, they slaughter by wholesale the birds that annually fly through twenty-two states.  It is quite useless to suggest anything to North Carolina in modern game laws.  As long as a killable bird remains, she will not stop the slaughter.  Her standing reply is “It brings a lot of money into Currituck County; and the people want the money.”  Even the members of the sportsmen’s clubs can shoot wild fowl in Currituck County, quite without limit; and I am told that the privilege often is abused.  Quite recently I heard of a member of one of the clubs who shot 164 ducks and geese in two days!

Apparently any suggestions made to North Carolina would not be treated seriously, especially if they would tend really to elevate the sport of game shooting, or better protect the game.  There is, however, a melancholy interest attached to the framing of good game laws, whether they ever are likely to be adopted or not.  Here is the duty of North Carolina: 

  Stop the killing of robins, doves and larks for food, absolutely and
  forever.  This measure is necessary to agriculture and to the good
  name of the state.

  Stop the shooting of any game for sale, prohibit the possession of
  game for sale, and the sale of wild native game.

  Establish bag limits on all waterfowl, and on all other game birds
  and mammals.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Our Vanishing Wild Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.