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The Twilight Zone
An Editorial - by Steve Brandle
On the original TV series, “The Twilight Zone,” there was
an episode where a man died and ended up in what he
thought was heaven. He came to his senses, after his
death, in a tavern filled with beautiful women and he was
the only available man. “This truly must be heaven”, he
thought to himself. The giggly young girls flirted with
him and then he moved to the pool table for a game.
Playing the first game of eight ball, all by himself, he
cleared the table without missing and then sank the eight
ball with a triple bank shot. Now, totally convinced he’d
died and gone to heaven, he racked the balls for another
go at the table. As he put the triangle rack back in it’s
place, another fellow entered the bar and challenged him
to a game.
With a smirk on his face the new
angel eagerly agreed to play the stranger and promptly
cleaned his clock; again without missing a shot. This went
on for several games before it struck the winner as odd.
He then tried to intentionally miss a shot and couldn’t.
In fact the harder he tried to throw the game, the balls
went in the pockets in even more ridiculous ways. There
was no challenge to anything he did in this place. He
walked over to the dart board and threw three bulls eyes.
All the women wanted to be with him. The final scene
showed him glancing at the laughing stranger he’d beat at
the pool table who now sported a set of devil horns.
In my opinion, some of the
sportsmen in Michigan desire to visit “The Twilight Zone”
where limits of master angler size fish are caught almost
every trip out and record book bucks are taken on a yearly
basis. And if these goals cannot be achieved, we must
aggressively alter and enhance the habitat to bring us
closer to these desired results. Can this be right?
“Then God said, “I give you every
seed-bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and
every tree that has fruit with seed in it. They will be
yours for food. And to all the beasts of the earth and all
the birds of the air and all the creatures that move on
the ground-everything that has the breath of life in it-I
give every green plant for food.” And it was so. God saw
all that he had made, and it was very good. And there was
evening, and there was morning-the sixth day. Thus the
heavens and the earth were completed in all of their vast
array. (Genesis 1, verses 29 – 31.)
All of us have a theory of how the
world came about. I believe the above words are a small
portion the truth. I’ll never judge you if you don’t
agree. The point is, “nature” is perfect in it’s approach
to managing all of the plants and animals in our world and
has been doing it much longer than anyone alive today. As
experts, we have a lot to learn.
How long did “nature” know how to
allow birds to fly before we understood it ourselves? In
the past few centuries, man replaced predators and disease
as a curb for animal population control. And when we don’t
act to control, why are we saddened when animals perish
because of famine and sickness? Man and nature’s method of
perfection is so different. Compared to nature, we are
still in the “trial and error” stage when it comes to
enhancing wildlife populations. The course we set in our
attempts to “manage” nature should always allow us to make
corrections or start over without despair.
And here is how some of us seek to
visit the Twilight Zone. “If only everybody would do this
and this, we could find utopia”. “By properly managing the
fisheries in this state, all of us could catch a master
angler fish at least once in awhile”. “By properly
managing the deer herd, a Boone & Crockett buck would be
ours if only we pass on the younger deer and could wait
for the opportunity for the mature one to pass in front of
us”. “If it wasn’t for the commercial fisherman, the
average Joe could catch a limit of huge perch in the Great
Lakes any time he wished”. “The DNR has taken all of the
fun out of hunting and fishing because there’s too many
regulations on what, how, when, why, how many and what
type of resource I can harvest”. “The State of Michigan
needs to improve the habitat for every one of those
natural resources I want to harvest; when and if I decide
to do it”. “I’m going to buy a piece of land and manage it
to it’s fullest potential for wildlife production.”
Nature, is perfect in it’s management of the world’s
resources, we are not.
Mankind, as a whole, is determined
to mange the world to his interest. Some sportsmen have
the desire to micro-manage the wildlife to peak numbers
and highest quality possible. There is also a group that
believes that through simple resource conservation these
goals will be accomplished, naturally. There is a
difference.
For example, the majority of deer
hunters in Michigan prefer to see a lot of deer in the
woods and if a legal buck is spotted, they want the chance
to harvest it. This same group of hunters will take a doe
only if they want to. Our deer season is set to please
this majority and the present condition of the herd is a
direct result. Nature is providing us what we deserve.
It’s only when man tries to over manage the deer and
ignore the ecology that bad things happen.
A huge number of deer allows us to
see many in the woods on opening day. The huge numbers
also depleted the environment, in parts of the state,
which is partially controlled in nature by disease,
predators, and famine. Killing almost 90% of 1-1/2 year
old bucks every year and passing on does has produced a
buck to doe ratio that is so far off from a natural herds
make up, there are parts of the state where all of the
does are not bred each season. Where antler less hunting
is encouraged by the state, (northeast lower peninsula)
button bucks are being taken and this just adds to the
lack of bucks. So now, along with replacing predators, man
is becoming a “super disease” bent on exterminating
unwanted deer.
If we could achieve the perfect
environment where we have the opportunity to harvest all
that we want or to take a giant specimen of any given
species, have we succeeded or would it be the Twilight
Zone game of eight ball? Perfection just isn’t that
important to me. What is important to me is that we work
with nature instead of twisting it to satisfy our selfish
desires.
Passion and strong emotions are
very good qualities. The only time these qualities become
harmful are when we ignore common sense. In the outdoor
world, these qualities may win a battle, but lose the war.
QDM and “flies only” fishing, for example, are skirmishes
in the outdoor realm. The act of harvesting fish and
animals is a war against those that would take this right
away from us. All of us need to be able to tell the
difference and recognize our true enemies. |