Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

  Cow and calf moose are permanently protected.

  Only bull moose, with at least two 3-inch prongs on its horns, may
  be killed.

  Caribou have had a close season since 1899.

  On gray and black squirrels, doves and quail, there is no open
  season.

  The open season for deer varies from ten weeks to four weeks, and in
  parts of three counties there is no open season at all.

  Silencers are prohibited, and firearms in forests may be prohibited
  by the Governor during droughts.

  Nearly all wild-fowl shooting ends January 1, but in two places, on
  December 1.

People who have not learned the facts habitually think of Maine as a vast killing-ground for deer; and it is well for it to be known that the hunting-grounds have been carefully designated, according to the abundance or scarcity of game.

Maine has wisely chosen to regard her hunting-grounds and her deer as a valuable asset, and she manages them accordingly.  To be a guide in that state is to be a good citizen, and a protector of game from illegal slaughter.  No non-resident may hunt without a licensed guide.  The licenses for the thousands of deer killed in Maine each year, and the expenses of the visiting sportsmen who hunt them, annually bring into the state and leave there a huge sum of money, variously estimated at from $2,000,000 to $3,000,000.  One can only guess at the amount from the number of non-resident licenses issued; but certainly the total can not be less than $1,000,000.

Although Mr. L.T.  Carleton is no longer chairman of the Commission of Inland Fisheries and Game, the splendid services that he rendered the state of Maine during his thirteen years of service, especially in the creation of a good code of game laws, constitute an imperishable monument to his name and fame.

There is very little that Maine needs in the line of new legislation, or better protection to her game.  With the enactment of a resident license law and a five-year close season for woodcock, plover, snipe and sandpipers, I think her laws for the protection of wild life would be sufficiently perfect for all practical purposes.  The Pine-Tree State is to be congratulated upon its wise and efficient handling of the wild-life situation.

MARYLAND: 

How has it come to pass that Maryland lacks more good wild-life laws than any other state in the Union except North Carolina?  Of the really fundamental protective laws, embracing the list that to every self-respecting state seems indispensable, Maryland has almost none save certain bag-limit laws!  Otherwise, the state is wide open!  It is indeed high time that she should abandon her present attitude of hostility to wild life, and become a good neighbor.  She should do what is fair and right about the protection of the migratory game and bird life that annually passes twice through her territory!

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Our Vanishing Wild Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.