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dan-0 | 2 years ago

I mean, yeah, but have you ever tried to follow a blood trail through thick brush in the dark?

I'm not fully disagreeing, but there's a distinction to be made. I can find my blind, my car, and maybe a carcass on a pristine forest floor on some pretty dark nights, but if that thing jumped into some greenbrier or other brush, good luck. It's hard enough seeing them in that stuff during the day, I've had multiple occasions where I walked by a thicket in the day only to see deer flush out after I'm past it.

Also, some people just can't see in the dark well, regardless of how well they see in the day.

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watwut|2 years ago

> Also, some people just can't see in the dark well, regardless of how well they see in the day.

I think that if you are hanging around forrest with a gun and shooting that gun in the night, you probably should not be someone with poorer then eyesight in the night.

Saying that as someone who occasionally returned late from hike and would prefer not to be shot by hunters.

dan-0|2 years ago

That's not it, not what I said, and not what I meant. I didn't say anything about shooting in the dark.

You're not hunting deer in the dark. You're getting to your blind before sunrise or you could be recovering your deer in the dark from a day time shot.

cptskippy|2 years ago

You fundamentally do not understand the activity of hunting and equate it to just shooting a gun. That's like saying camping is the activity of sleeping in a tent at night. There's a lot more involved that you're not aware of.

The point is that the activity of hunting spans over an entire day and certain activities can be performed before sunrise or after sunset and none of those activities involve shooting a gun.