maybe when you’re talking about rifle, but almost every bow hunter I know will leave the animal and not push it after an evening shot..
so the question is valid..
I expected people to say, after they found the downed animal.. but this can quickly be complicated..
last day of the season, you don’t find the animal that night but you find it the next morning, you clearly aren’t going to cut your tag for a day outside the legal season…
that’s where the debate started.
legally by the regulations, you are told NOT to cut your tag unless you’ve retrieved your game…
so if you follow the law in this situation, it makes you break another law.
interesting conundrum, I’m sure it’s not common but I’m positive it’s happened.
As a CO told me, “when your standing over it”.
last light last day is a conundrum
If I walked in on a dead one, obviously it was killed the day before in the legal season, would cut the tag as such.
wounded, I don't think there is a legal obligation to retrieve a wounded animal
so that short period when looking/hunting before finding could be dicey, just be looking for something in-season at the time, no loose lips
and finding the wounded but alive, would have to let it walk, by the law
Last edited by high horse Hal; 09-24-2022 at 07:01 PM.
Glad to say I have hunted Northern BC
Simon Fraser had pretty good judgement on what he found in BC
If it’s a last light/last day of the season scenario, then I’m making a call to the CO service. The idea of a wounded animal suffering or losing an animal 50 yards from where last seen would bug the crap out of me. I’d like to think the CO would allow me the opportunity to finish what started out as a fair chase hunt.
"The budget should be balanced, the Treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of officialdom should be tempered and controlled, and the assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed lest Rome become bankrupt. People must again learn to work, instead of living on public assistance." Cicero - 55 BC
..... The NDP approach: if the facts don't fit your ideology, just pretend the facts don't exist.......
thanks for your contribution.
So what you’re saying is you’d walk up to a 3pt mulie on November 1st the day after any Buck closes, tag it for November 1 and go about your merry way? Couldn’t think of a faster way to get a ticket for poaching out of season.
Edit
im going to go with phoning the CO and hoping they are in a good trusting mood, as both ways make you break the law otherwise.
Last edited by RyoTHC; 09-24-2022 at 07:34 PM.
Last day, last light animal that I don't retrieve until the next morning is going to have the tag cut for the day it was shot. Without standing over said animal with a watch to record time of last breath I have to assume it was prior to 11:59 pm.
Assuming it didn't expire overnight and needed a coupe de grâce the next morning, my conscience would still be clear knowing that the animal was initially shot legally in an open season. If that's how it went down, there should be some evidence on the ground like old blood trail and/or the wounded bedding area to back up my story.
I don't spend much time thinking about imaginary "What If" scenarios in my head to fret over.