I hope that this article will serve as a starting point for novice hunters who should continue to seek more on the topic. Even after decades as a hunter, I continue to learn more.
Hunting will be a serious business in the near future. So I will do my best to present tried and true practices and advice, and attempt to describe what I believe hunting conditions and practices might be during the coming bad times. If we are hunting to survive, then losing a game would be unacceptable and perhaps tragic. High-quality protein during a famine or lean times would be very hard to get.
Lessons From The Past
I once had a neighbor who asked me to fix an old single-shot .22 rimfire rifle. The firing pin had been worn out from much use. It was a very old, battered, and simple single-shot .22 Long Rifle (LR) rifle. This was a Winchester Model 67A — a model that first manufactured during the Great Depression. The Model 67A was produced from 1934 to 1963. After repairing the firing pin, I know the bolt of the Model 67A quite well. After it had been repaired I attempted to return it. The owner then offered it to me as a gift. But after hearing his story about his experiences with the rifle, I figured that I should refuse, politely of course, since he was a friend. It would be better if it stayed in the family. This was no ordinary .22LR rifle.
Here is the gist of my friend’s hunting recollections: During the Great Depression, the folks in northwestern Montana were not at first all that aware that there was an economic depression underway, yet he said “…it was hard to get anything to eat”. He was just a boy at that time and one day the rifle was given to him so that he could hunt, and that he did. He hunted deer. One day the Sheriff showed up and had him get into his pickup and took him to a distant town in the middle of nowhere in western Montana. There were people there who were starving hungry so the Sheriff took my friend hunting and filled up the bed of his pickup with deer to deliver it to several families.Continue reading“Hunting in Desperate Times – Part 1, by Tunnel Rabbit”