{"id":239260,"date":"2025-10-20T19:17:13","date_gmt":"2025-10-20T19:17:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/239260\/"},"modified":"2025-10-20T19:17:13","modified_gmt":"2025-10-20T19:17:13","slug":"i-hunt-wild-game-as-a-sustainable-food-source","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/239260\/","title":{"rendered":"I hunt wild game as a sustainable food source"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">Every meal of wild game has a story worth telling. <\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">Of course, there\u2019s the story of the hunt, a recounting of the moments that lead to a success for the hunter, but there is much more to it than that. It\u2019s also a story of the ecology of a place, one not consumed by human development. <\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">I\u2019m closing in on five decades as an environmentalist, but I don\u2019t think I really understood that story until I started hunting about 15 years ago. I\u2019ve always spent every second I could outdoors. Whether I was hiking, riding a mountain bike, surfing, or paddling a river, I was moving through nature, but not part of it. Hunting changed that. <\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">Typically, people are introduced to hunting by their families or friends, but for me, it started academically. Before taking a leave from a prep school where I taught, I told my Advanced Placement environmental science class that upon my return, I would begin a unit on how the way we produce food affects the environment. As I was leaving, one student asked if I could incorporate hunting and wild food into the unit. Since I wasn\u2019t very familiar with the topic, I promised I\u2019d research it. <\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">I immediately ordered a few books on those subjects. Halfway through the first one, I found myself asking why I\u2019d never thought about hunting before. I grew up on a small farm. My father maintained a large garden, and we raised sheep, chickens, and turkeys for household consumption \u2014 so as an adult, I consider carefully where my food comes from. But raising livestock where I live in Newbury isn\u2019t possible, and it had never occurred to me that hunting could be a way to locally and sustainably source a significant portion of my protein. That realization only clicked in after that student\u2019s question. That moment marked the beginning of my hunting journey, which later deepened my connection to the outdoor places I love.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">Whether or not a person obtains food through hunting, we are all part of, and benefit from, the same ecological process. In the wilds of the Northeast, the story of food begins with solar energy being converted into chemical energy by the northern hardwoods, oaks, and hickory trees, along with a wide variety of shrubs and herbaceous plants that make up the forest understory. These plants create the foundation for a complex web of feeding relationships, where that chemical energy is transferred from one organism to another, sustaining life. The hunter is part of this system, and just like a deer, squirrel, or rabbit, I am a recipient of a portion of that energy, first captured by the plants of the forest. <\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">When we consume food from modern food systems, we\u2019re at the receiving end of a form of finite ancient sunlight locked away as fossil fuels, which is used to power farm machinery and processing and transportation of food. For the hunter, however, the wild game we consume is not only local but renewably sustained by yesterday\u2019s and today\u2019s sunlight. So, as a hunter, I care about the animals I pursue, as well as the trees, soil, water, microorganisms recycling nutrients, insects pollinating plants \u2014 all of which feed the deer and turkeys I hunt, which, in turn, feed me.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">When I\u2019m in the woods hunting, deer and the \u201csign\u201d they leave behind in the forest (markings like rubs on trees, scraped patches of dirt, and bent limbs known as \u201clicking\u201d branches) occupy much of my attention, but I also see the subtle changes in the places I spend hours, still, in one place, season after season. <\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">Perhaps the starkest difference I\u2019ve observed is how different natural landscapes are when there is not a consistent human presence. A trip to my local land trust property or state park that\u2019s fragmented by trails utilized by trail runners, dog walkers, mountain bikers, confirms this reality. Is there wildlife? Sure, but not like in trailless areas, where wildlife only deals with the occasional human intrusion. In these undisturbed places, wildlife thrives without constant human disturbance. Although this was something I knew to be true in theory, it became something entirely different when I began witnessing it in person. <\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph | gutter_20_0 railless margin_horizontal_10 width_max_1080\">Through hunting, I feel I have a greater stake than ever in ensuring we have clean air and water, healthy soil, and wild places. That\u2019s because in a very real sense, nature now sustains me more completely than it once did. I\u2019ll admit that despite having spent countless hours outdoors, whether that be conducting scientific fieldwork at a remote outpost or cruising down a trail on my bike with flowering lupines up to the handlebars, at times I have lost sight of my intrinsic connection to nature, a connection I celebrate with every meal that I can now trace back to the places I love. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Every meal of wild game has a story worth telling. 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