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Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Editorial Bear trapping should be relegated to history
Portland Press Herald Friday, May 11, 2007

Maine has long been linked with the image of a bear -- creatures that can instill both awe and fear, depending on how far away you are standing. Long ago, bear-hunting and bear-trapping were integral parts of life for backwoods survival, providing meat and hides for a long winter.
Things, of course, have changed dramatically. Hunting is still a part of life for many sportsmen, who rightfully regard it as both a link to the past and an expression of contemporary lifestyle.
Hunting is also a part of Maine's economy, drawing sportsmen from around the country and the world to use lodges and guides throughout northern Maine.
There are people who oppose hunting as cruel or unnecessary, swayed by the visceral nature of an activity that ends successfully with the death of an animal. Hunting, however, is far more humane than the commercial meat industry. It has been around forever -- literally -- and hunters who practice it in a responsible, respectful manner deserve the right to do so.
Hunting is also necessary to control wildlife populations. Deer, for example, can quickly reproduce beyond the limits of their environment to support them, but hunting for sport is an acceptable way to maintain a balance.
Which brings the discussion to recreational bear trapping. Maine has the dubious distinction of being the only state in America that allows such trapping.
A proposed new law, under consideration as LD 1635, aims to end that -- as it should.
The Sportman's Alliance of Maine has consistently opposed any legislation that would infringe upon or eliminate bear trapping. Part of its argument is that trapping does not pose a threat to Maine's bear population. Yes, the group is correct -- the Maine Audubon Society says the state has about 23,000 bears and that the number has increased since 1990.
The argument against bear trapping, however, is not about the numbers but about the nature of trapping. There is no sense of a fair chase in catching and then harvesting an animal ensnared in a steel leg trap. It's an execution, not a hunt.
Last year, trapping accounted for just 130 of the 2,800 bears that were legally taken by sportsmen. Clearly, it does not play a role in the management of Maine's bear population.
Maine's legislators should finally recognize that we belong with the rest of the nation and prohibit recreational bear trapping.


Reader comments

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Richard Laney of Gardiner, ME
May 15, 2007 1:04 PM
In regards to Bill Randall's comments about me, I would like to give the correct facts that actually took place.
I hunted bobcats with hounds for many years and never set off any traps in the woods.
Truthfully I saw very few that were set. I knew a couple of trappers that trapped for many years in Hobstown, Upper Enchanted in Sommerset County, and if they knew I was going to be running my hounds in the area, they would spring their traps. I had a very good relationship between the trapper and myself. I would like to state further, I have the utmost confidence in the way the Inland Fisheries and Wildlife is managing the bearhunting and trapping in the State of Maine.
Dick Laney, Maine Registered Guide for 35 years.report abuse
Dena Winslow of Presque Isle, ME
May 11, 2007 7:57 PM
Great article and interesting comments from Cecil Gray and Bill Randall. I have the utmost respect for both of you! Al Libby, just so you know the real truth... PETA has absolutely nothing to do with this bill to ban bear trapping. Unfortunately, you have fallen victim to the false propaganda out there that the oppontnts of the bill want you to believe. Actually this bill comes directly from Maine and Maine people! It is Mainer's who overwhelmingly (according to recent polls, and the close vote of the referendum) want this horrible practice stopped! Now, I also believe that people outside Maine do not approve of bear trapping - otherwise Maine wouldn't be the only state that still allows it. However, those people from other states have nothing to do with this particilar bill. I listened carefully at the testimony opposing this legislation and interestingly enough, there wasn't even ONE single thing that could be considered a reasonable grounds to oppose it. Danny Martin even likened it to fishing with flies verses worms in his testimony! Hardly a valid argument for bear trapping in my opinion! The real reason for such poor logic is that there is NO GOOD reason to uphold this cruel abusive practice in Maine any longer. There simply wasn't anything he could have said to actually support the continuation of a practice that the vast majority of people in Maine want to see end. No wonder he had to talk about fishing in his testimony! I applaud Ms. Eberly for her courage to take a stand against a group of her fellow elected officials who so obviously don't give a darn about what their constituants think. If they did, they would have unanamously voted this bill "ought to pass!" Now that the bill goes to the full Legislature, I believe that the other elected officials realize that Mainers want to see this barbaric practice ended once and for all. Call your legislator and urge them to do the right thing and support this important legislation! report abuse
Bill Randall of Winthrop, ME
May 11, 2007 12:34 PM
And I should add that this MPGA group actually voted to ban bear trapping during this time. If the recreational hunters with dogs spoke the truth, they would tell you they hate traps and snares. They have seen their dogs killed and maimed in these things, just as I have. I saw an old bobcat hunting friend, Dick Laney of Gardiner, at the bear hearing on Tuesday who used to set off all of the traps he ever saw in the woods. That was back when traps were legal to set for bobcats during the winter time. I know other bobcat hunters who used to do the same thing.report abuse
Bill Randall of Winthrop, ME
May 11, 2007 12:23 PM
I made a typo and here is the correction.

This group of hunters and guides did not care a twit about other Maine recreational hunters and sportsmen and the MPGA membership was at that time solely a group of greedy bear bait hunting guides who ultimately took over and now effectively own our public resource, the bear. report abuse

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