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PostPosted: Mon May 05, 2008 8:47 pm 
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Chop Mouth
Chop Mouth

Joined: 09 Feb 2006
Posts: 382
Location: va
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THIS IS POSTED ON HSUS WEBSITE. NOW IS THE TIME TO STAND UNITED AND JOIN THE VIRGINIA HUNTING DOG ALLIANCE FOR THE BATTLE THAT LAYS AHEAD. READ THE LETTER BY HSUS PRESIDENT WAYNE PARCELLE.
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Take Action to Restrict Hound Hunting in Virginia

Dear Friend,

A declining number of states still allow the hunting of wildlife with packs of dogs, and this inhumane and unsporting practice is currently under scrutiny in Virginia. Hound hunters chase bears, deer, raccoons, and other wildlife to exhaustion or corner them in a tree and shoot them down for sport or trophies. Many hunters fit the dogs with GPS collars, and simply follow the radio signal on a handheld device to locate a trapped animal after the dogs do all the work. And dogs who fail to hunt well are sometimes abandoned. The practice provokes the ire of landowners, outdoor enthusiasts, animal welfare advocates, and hunters alike. You can help!

The Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries is considering stricter regulations and your voice is urgently needed.


TAKE ACTION
Take a moment to send a message to the members of the Hunting With Hounds Stakeholder Advisory Committee, letting them know that using large packs of dogs to chase, harass, and kill wildlife no longer has a place in Virginia and should be restricted. Please tell your friends and family in Virginia how they can help, too.

Thanks for all you do for animals!

Sincerely,

Wayne Pacelle
President & CEO
The Humane Society of the United States

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WE NEED ALL VIRGINIA SPORTSMEN AND SPORTSWOMEN TO GET INVOLVED AND JOIN US. SEND A DONATION AND TELL YOUR HUNT CLUB, FRIENDS, RELATIVES ETC. GET IN THE FIGHT OR LOOSE YOUR RIGHTS!

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PostPosted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 2:41 am 
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Chop Mouth
Chop Mouth

Joined: 09 Feb 2006
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Location: va
Help protect Virginia's Outdoor Sporting Heritage!

Send your Donation TODAY!

Checks can be made payable to VHDA and mailed to:

Virginia Hunting Dog Alliance
P.O. Box 657
Powhatan, Virginia 23139

Corporate donations are welcome and appreciated!


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 16, 2008 8:49 pm 
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BANNED
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theres alot more of use Virgina hunters than i thought

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WALKERS=Mans Best Friend,Coons Worst Nightmare

I Hunt Walkers And Redbones

Im A Walker Boy,I Hunt The Best And Get Rid Of The Rest

If You Dont Hunt Walkers Get Out Of The Woods

#4 In Total Post


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PostPosted: Mon Sep 29, 2008 5:53 pm 
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Chop Mouth
Chop Mouth

Joined: 09 Feb 2006
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Location: va
Hunting-dog owners try to keep opponents at bay
By STEVE SZKOTAK – 1 day ago

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — In a state considered the American birthplace of hunting with hounds, George Washington's favorite sport has become a target for some Virginia landowners who say baying dogs and their owners are trampling property rights.

Even other hunters object to a Virginia right-to-retrieve law viewed as the most absolute in the nation: Hunters have free reign to chase after dogs that stray onto posted private property.

Proponents are rising to protect their right to hunt, mindful that other Southern states have already limited or eliminated certain forms of the sport because of complaints from property owners.

Courtly fox hunters and down-home bear and coon hunters — an unlikely coalition — contend their heritage is at stake.

"If we have a major defeat in Virginia, I think it would hurt hunting with hounds in every state. Therefore, we will fight it at every turn," vowed Kirby Burch of the Virginia Hunting Dog Alliance, an umbrella group for 450 hunt clubs claiming more than 30,000 members.

A big part of the friction involves loss of rural habitat due to development. In Virginia, land is being developed at more than three times the rate of population growth, according to "Hunting with Hounds in Virginia: A Way Forward," a state-commissioned report.

The upshot: More dogs are running on private lands, riling property owners.

Forms of hound hunting have been banned from Washington state to Massachusetts, and Southern states have followed suit — in part because of opposition from animal-rights groups, but also from landowners. Texas banned hunting deer with dogs in 1990, and Alabama, Georgia and Florida more recently have restricted the sport.

Those actions have prompted officials to examine the sport in Virginia, where approximately 180,000 hunters use dogs. Game officials here say they hope to deal with the issue before problems mount.

Some hunters say the criticism comes from outsiders unfamiliar with the sport's heritage, but that's not always the case.

"An awful lot of what we consider 'new people' are sons and daughters of Virginia but don't have the tradition of the land," said Rick Busch, assistant director of the wildlife division of the state Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. "It's not necessarily Yankees piling into our Southern states."

Hunting with hounds in Virginia dates nearly 400 years ago to the founding of Jamestown, America's first permanent English settlement. Dogs are used to hunt bears, deer, fox, raccoons and rabbits.

Washington and Thomas Jefferson were among its earliest enthusiasts. Congressman John Randolph, who represented Virginia in the early 19th century, was known to enter the House of Representatives with a pack of hounds at his heels. The sport flourished among the Southern plantation culture and spread to Appalachia with Scots-Irish immigrants.

That was back when the same land supported far fewer people. Hunting enthusiasts and opponents alike wonder whether there's still enough room for the specially bred, high-priced dogs to run.

On Oct. 23, the Board of Game and Inland Fisheries is to consider proposals that seem to satisfy neither side. The proposals do not, for instance, recommend changes to the right-to-retrieve law, disappointing property owners like Ben Jones.

He became so weary of hunters traipsing after their dogs on his 165 acres about 40 miles southwest of Richmond that he billed the state $4,750. The bill was ignored.

"The Constitution says government can't take property from the private sector and place it in the public sector without JUST COMPENSATION to the property owner," Jones, a self-employed contractor, wrote in an e-mail to The Associated Press.

The dog retrieval law is especially contentious when it comes to hunting deer, because such hunts can cover thousands of acres. Wildlife biologist Ben Fulton, a member of a state advisory committee that has studied hunting with hounds, said deer hunters with dogs disturb his own hunts on his 200 acres in Cumberland County. The right-to-retrieve law, he said, is an open invitation.

"All you have to do is go on somebody's property and just say, 'I'm looking for my dog,'" Fulton said. "I would like to see the law changed to where they had to gain permission."

Burch, of the Hunting Dog Alliance, said that alternative surely would be more irritating.

"Do you want me knocking on your door at 3 a.m. in the morning and saying I want my dog? C'mon," Burch said.

David Birdsall, 68, lives on a 500-acre farm in Gloucester County and has hunted deer since the 1960s. He also shows his Black and Tan Coonhounds.

"To hear these dogs run and chase is what it's all about," said Birdsall, a retired veterinarian.

When he hunts these days, he moves up Virginia's Middle Peninsula near Chesapeake Bay to a less populated county.

A little common courtesy, he said, goes a long way.

On the Net:
Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries: http://www.dgif.virginia.gov/
Virginia Hunting Dog Alliance: http://www.vahda.org/


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 08, 2008 1:54 pm 
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Chop Mouth
Chop Mouth

Joined: 09 Feb 2006
Posts: 382
Location: va
The General Assembly is coming soon and this is were the fights will be with new bills being introduced that may target hunting dog owners in Virginia and we need your help.


Help protect Virginia's Outdoor Sporting Heritage!

Send your Donation TODAY!

Checks can be made payable to VHDA and mailed to:

Virginia Hunting Dog Alliance
P.O. Box 657
Powhatan, Virginia 23139

Corporate donations are welcome and appreciated!


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 08, 2008 8:12 pm 
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he Hokieman1 what county are you from


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PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2008 7:39 am 
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Chop Mouth
Chop Mouth

Joined: 09 Feb 2006
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Location: va
Its that time of the year. The GA will be is session soon and we expext to see an over abundance of animal welfare bills introduced along with bills that will effect hunting dog owners in virginia. we need your financial support now.

Help protect Virginia's Outdoor Sporting Heritage!

Send your Donation TODAY!

Checks can be made payable to VHDA and mailed to:

Virginia Hunting Dog Alliance
P.O. Box 657
Powhatan, Virginia 23139


As you can see by a letter written to the editor of the dailypress.com that Peta and Hsus has already started their campaign to get public support.

Dog hunting
December 7, 2008
Let me see the pro-dog hunters now that the season is in full swing. I have over 50 pictures of hunting dogs unfed left in the woods for weeks, not cared for at all. One hunter who came to pick up his dog said if they are hungry they hunt better.

Pro football player Michael Vick is serving time in jail for just the same treatment of dogs or worse. Maybe these hunters need to be punished the same way.

Virginia needs to change dog-hunting laws. Other states have seen that it is good for the sport.

Maybe dog hunters then will learn how to hunt instead of running the deer down like a trapped victim.



Bill Smith


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