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the still -hunter becomes part of nature

August 1st, 2008 by admin

Today in 2008 , hunters are just about as able to hone their natural hunting senses as their aboriginal or metis ancestors.  And a small but growing number have begun to return to their aboriginal ancestory and ancestors - whether they be of aboriginal origin or metis.  Still hunting has returned as one of the most basic of hunting skills.   These still hunters have discovered that the investment of time afield pays more than rich rewards and dividends in the intensity and overall enjoyment of the hunting experience and experiences.  Working only with guile and wind , the hunter pits skill and experience against the most adaptable animal in the forest.  Still hunting is an absorbing drama, more than intensely riveting from beginning to end.

By definition, still hunting means slowly and silently slipping through the forest , tuned and tuning to its very rhythms.  In the process - the still -hunter becomes part of nature , instead of an intruder feeling where to go and always letting instinct and instincts be the very guide and teacher.  It is the ultimate test of the woodsman in the whitetail deer’s home ground.

Hunt Lake Manitoba Narrows

www.huntlakemanitobanarrows.com

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