The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader

Lt. Col. David Grossman, renowned author of “On Killing” and “On Combat” has teamed up with Linda Miller and Keith Cunningham, trainers of professional marksman at Canada’s prestigious MilCun Training Centre, to write the much anticipated “On Hunting”.

  The book On Hunting draws from ecology, philosophy, and anthropology and is sprinkled with campfire stories which appeals to hunters and non-hunters alike.    On Hunting shows that the need for hunting for both mankind as well as the wild earth we inhabit.
    Amazon: https://amzn.to/3koKi4V Grossman On Truth: https://grossmanontruth.com/product/on-hunting/ MilCun Training Center: http://www.milcun.com/    

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What is The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader?

The Silvercore Podcast explores the mindset and skills that build capable people. Host Travis Bader speaks with hunters, adventurers, soldiers, athletes, craftsmen, and founders about competence, integrity, and the pursuit of mastery, in the wild and in daily life. Hit follow and step into conversations that sharpen your edge.

Kind: captions
Language: en-GB

I'm Travis Badder, and this
is the Silver Core Podcast.

Silver Core has been providing its members
with the skills and knowledge necessary

to be confident and proficient in the
outdoors for over 20 years, and we make

it easier for people to deepen their.

To the natural world.

If you enjoy the positive and educational
content we provide, please let others

know by sharing, commenting and
following so that you can join in on

everything that Silver Core stands for.

If you'd like to learn more about
becoming a member of the Silver

Core Club and community, visit
our website at silvecore.ca.

All right, you guys are gonna
make me work for it today.

I've got a few guests on this Silver Core
podcast, and I like to make sure I get a

decent intro for everybody cuz I, I view
it like somebody coming into your house.

You don't ask somebody to come into
your house and introduce themselves.

You bring them into your house
and you introduce 'em to your

guests who're gonna be there.

And that's exactly what I'm gonna attempt
to get through with the three of you.

I had to call back some of the
accolades just to make this one flow.

So today I'm joined by Linda Miller,
a competitive shooter who has won

medals at the Commonwealth Games Cuba,
world Cup, Mexico World Cup, and was

the first woman to win the Ontario
Lieutenant Governor's Medal for shooting

Retired Captain Keith Cunningham.

With over 25 years of experience in
the Canadian and US Armed Forces combat

tours of Vietnam peacekeeping and
counter, snipping operations as Cyprus,

and together with Linda run Milk and
Training Center and they coach high level

competitive shooters and professionals.

Around the world and have authored the
book Mental Marksmanship, which we've

discussed in past episodes of the Silver
Core Podcast with my friend Ryan Stacy,

finally retired Lieutenant Colonel Dave
Grossman of the US Army, founder of the

Grossman on Truth, author of numerous
books, notably on killing the psychology,

the psychological cost of Learning to kill
in War and Society, and has teamed up with

Linda and Keith in their brand new book:

on hunting, a definitive study
of the mind, body, and ecology of

the hunter in the modern world.

Welcome to the Silver Core
Podcast, Linda, Keith, and Dave.

Thank you Travis.

Thanks Travis.

sound very exciting.

I'm really glad you did the intros, . Yes.

Hey, you know, it's always easier
for somebody else to, you bet.

So we've we're, um, you guys are
just wrapping up a week of recording

your audiobook for On Hunting.

And right now I believe you guys are
all in Dave's house in separate rooms.

I think we've got all of our
technical issues kind of sorted

and, um, there might be a little bit
of delay while we're talking here.

Hopefully that doesn't interrupt
the flow too much, but I, what I'm

really curious about is what was
the impetus for the book on hunting?

How did this first come about?

You're up, Dave?

Uh, well, I, I've had
the idea for a long time.

Um, I, I wrote "On Killing" and,
uh, it evolved into, on combat,

uh, the two distinctly different
dynamics, but the, the third leg of

understanding human beings is hunting.

Uh, you know, it, it's all we did that,
Linda, there's a great quote in the

book about if the existence of mankind
was 24 hours, Right up until the last

six minutes, all we did was hunt.

You know, it's who we are,
it's what we were built to do.

It's what we were designed to do.

And, and I mentioned that to Linda one
time, uh, and I thought, what do you

think about co-authoring this book?

I've got an outline and a concept
that passed it to Linda and boom, you

know, I'll let her take it from there.

So next, um, as with most of these things,
I had to actually get knowledgeable

about hunting cuz like most people, I
was a hunter but I really didn't know

much more than just how to, you know,
ask my gunsmith to keep my gun tuned

and go out into the stand and, you
know, shoot a deer when it arrived.

So I did a lot of reading.

I read a couple of hundred books, um, some
of them very old, some of them very new.

And it was very interesting to see other
people's perspectives on hunting and

some of their, their discomforts uh,
and where I thought it all tied back

together again was very, very old times.

And my first idea was that old
times were back to the, um, uh, gods

and goddesses of the great Greek
and Roman empires because they all

had, you know, gods and goddesses,
usually goddesses of, of the hunt.

And then I realized that that's not old.

What's old is stone stone age man,
or even earlier before, certainly

well before written records and
well before a lot of artifacts,

and we were hunters all that time.

We came from hunting stock and trying to
get an understanding of the depth of that

connection drove a lot of my reading.

And then, you know, there were
other things that they've had on his

wishlist, and I think we met them all.

Um, he thought that we
needed to talk about ethics.

So we talked about, um, and did
a fair bit of research about how

animals behave and what kind of ethics
they would've brought to the table

before man, and then how early men
would've, what ethics they would have.

Ethic, mostly ethics of efficiency
because you can't be spending more

calories than you're getting, you
know, or you're not gonna live.

Um, and right through to modern
times when we have much more

capable, um, killing power.

And we need to temper that, uh, in
order to have a fair and safe hunt.

And so then we, what, what
else did we wanna cover, Dave?

It was, um, uh, the tools
and skills, I think.

eh?

What's in common, uh, across time and
around the world and the types of skills

that you need and the kinds of tools
that you now more or less allowed to use.

Uh, they're all available to us.

We could go back to addle addles and
slingshots, but many jurisdictions, you're

not allowed to use those for a game hunt.

Um, and then we talked about the
relationship between some of those

skills and processes to, um, other things
that you might be knowledgeable in.

Um, police work, military, anything that
involves any kind of, of stalking and tool

use and, uh, if need be, then killing.

And so we looked at, at
that and the connections.

And then finally we looked at
what's the place of the hunter in

the modern world Is there a place?

And what does that, what does
that look like, and how does

he participate and contribute?

And what we found was that
because we are all under the

skin, all wired to be hunters.

That we all can access this incredible
depth of history that we, our little

pool of jeans has to those pools of
jeans that, that are our fore bearers.

I find that so interesting.

And Keith, did you wanna chime in on
there at all of the, I don't know if

they, I don't know if Dave mentioned
it, but, uh, the, the part that.

kind of perked my ears up, was one,
one time we were at, at one of Dave's

seminars and he, he, uh, said to Linda,
I'm gonna make you famous and rich.

And, and Linda said, well, , I'm not too,
I don't care much about the famous, but

I'm very interested in that rich part.

And, uh, my contribution to the
book was pretty much to stay outta

Linda's way while she was reading all
those, all those 200 and some books.

Uh, and then throughout the book
we needed, uh, campfire stories.

And so that's where I came in and, uh,
and wrote several of those, uh, those

campfire stories, which I enjoyed writing,
and I certainly enjoyed, uh, reading

them, uh, when we did this audio book.

There's something that so human about.

Yeah, yeah.

Sorry.

Say, say again, Dave.

As we were doing the narration,
uh, the campfire stories that

Keith had written were really
the areas that choked us all up.

All right.

That was so powerful.

And then Linda did her homework.

But they, all of the areas I kind
of anticipated, the one that came

outta nowhere and really was most
important was the whole business

of, uh, of sustaining the ecology.

And we got that Nairobi, you know,
we got the, the Kenya versus uh,

uh, uh, Linda kind of run with that.

I think it's most smart thing in the book.

And I didn't see that coming is
where the hunter is really the deep

pockets and the great resources to
sustain conservation over the years.

Yeah.

If I may be so crude, we're the
only ones who actually give a damn.

Yeah.

Hunters.

Hunters, yeah.

Yeah.

It's not the first time I've heard that.

You know, hunters will quite often
be, you know, the bird watchers.

They like going out there and
watching the birds just like we do.

But why aren't they contributing
to conservation the same way?

Right.

Right.

If he had hunter a
hunting license to do it.

And, uh, and, uh, you know, and,
and pay for a tag for every deer

that, for every bird that they
spotted, they probably wouldn't,

that it wouldn't pursue that sport.

And then here are hunters
paying vast amounts of money

to do what they need to do.

But, but Linda, dive into that
Kenya versus, uh, Namibia model.

Sorry, was there a
question in there for me?

Yeah, can you go ahead and, and you
know, what's happening in Kenya,

what's happening in Namibia and that.

Comparison dynamic.

Yeah.

Um, Kenya had a really serious
problem, um, decades ago with, um,

with poaching and a lot, uh, b both for
ivory, it was called the Ivory Wars.

Um, but there were lots of other,
um, uh, victims in, in what was going

on, and, and there were lots of very
powerful parties who were supporting uh,

illegal meat trade and any kind of high
value, uh, ivory or anything like that.

Um, and so the government of
Kenya said, absolutely no more.

We're not going to allow anything
to be taken, uh, in, in any

kind of hunting or poaching.

Well, it's easy to stop hunting
because we're all law abiding and,

you know, pay a great deal to hunt.

But it's not so easy to
stop poaching, right?

So the first thing that happened in
Kenya is that the animal population

absolutely dropped, um, because
everybody, there were no hunters.

There was no investment in,
uh, in anti poaching efforts.

It just, they took over and they killed.

I think the best estimate is something
between 70 and 80% of the game in Kenya.

Now it has come back a little bit,
but they still don't have the kind

of funding that Hunters had brought.

So they're still struggling somewhat.

They have a booming business
in, uh, in safaris, uh, photo

safaris and, um, and that's great.

Uh, but, but it doesn't contribute to the
economy the way, uh, safari hunting does.

Namibia on the other hand had,
um, had an unfortunate war with

South Africa with a good outcome.

The outcome was that Namibia won their
independence from South Africa, and the

people who were in charge said, we're
not gonna follow that Kenya example.

What we're gonna do is we are
gonna set up conservancies, and the

conservancies are going to be owned.

Uh, some are owned by tribes, some
are owned by investors, some are owned

by um, people that have lived there
for, uh, for several generations, uh,

with some German background in them.

And, um, the conservancies are huge.

The one that we were on was 25,000
acres, and they are in charge of

keeping their animal population
up so that it can be hunted.

And when it is hunted, the
meat, of course, is all used.

Uh, it goes either to the, um, running
of the business on the conservancy or

to the local indigenous tribe, or if
it's a, an indigenous, uh, conservancy,

then of course they, uh, they take
care of the meat and, and, uh, give

it out or sell it, uh, in some cases.

So it's, it's a booming business.

Uh, the animals become assets and it's
in everyone's interest to take care of

them, and it's worked extremely well.

Yeah, it's interesting that North
American model of conservation

and, and how it is applied and
how other places can pick it up.

Once you commoditize something and you
realize that it's, it's a resource and

there's a scarcity to it, all of a sudden
the idea of conserving that becomes

first and foremost, it gives it value.

And, you know, if, if you outlaw
hunting, the poachers will go around

all of a sudden that life really
has , it lacks the value that it

has when it's when you're hunting.

And I've, I've got friends who are,
do security and work over in South

Africa and you know, I remember we're
having sushi over here in Delta and

a guy gets a text message come in
and he looks at this, makes kind

of a funny face and puts it down.

I was like, what was that about?

He's like, oh, there's some poachers
they caught over in and the fellow's

property that they, he knows of.

Really?

And he's, oh, yeah.

And he shows you the picture.

And there's three guys that just
killed them, and that's what

they do with poachers over there.

They're just very, very ruthless.

Justice.

Now, it creates a very different
system when you bring that value for

the life of the animal out of it.

And it's kind of like
life and death, right?

Death is what gives life value.

When we start looking at these animals and
our resources as something that is gonna

be, I guess, a commodity , all of a sudden
it gets respected in a different way.

At least that's my observation.

And when looking, reading through
your book, I, I see some of,

um, the work, Dave, that you've
done in the past on, from, "On

Killing" bleeding over into this.

And I, I see a parallel between
the number of, uh, uh, these ideas.

What, what are your thoughts on that?

Well, you know, this, this really
is, you can't understand killing,

you can't understand combat
until you understand hunting.

So on killing, for example, if you go
to Google Scholars scholar.google.com,

uh, and you look up, uh, uh, any
work and see how many times it's been

cited in scholarly works, and, and
I, I was at this thing where this

one academic guy was retiring and
they said his, his, his papers have

been cited over, you know, 200 times.

I thought, wow, that's pretty cool.

You know, throughout his lifetime, his
stuff has been, What about my stuff?

I went to google.scholar.com
and "On Killing" alone has

been cited over 3,600 times.

Well, that's what On Hunting is gonna be.

Wow.

It's gonna be that level
of scholarly dynamic.

And Linda's laid that foundation.

She did her lit review.

You know, she put it all together.

But here's the heart of the matter
that Crazy American will pay.

Well, what's the record, Linda?

A quarter of a million dollars to, to go
over it and shoot that, that, that lion.

who's, and here's the key.

He's at the end of his life cycle anyway.

And oh, by the way, death by
old age in nature is a horrible,

hideous, slow death as you're
eaten alive by rodents and insects.

Mm-hmm.

, you know, they, nobody puts you unless
there's a predator there that puts you

out of your mercy, out, out of your,
you know, and, uh, what we had one part

in there where a guy said, if as he
watched a calf Wildebeest being killed

and eaten alive on this photo, safari.

Within, within 30 seconds, everybody on
the Saari was screaming, put him out of

his mercy, put him out of his misery.

Right?

And that's the ethical kill at the
hunter at the end of the life cycle.

And that pays for all of the game wardens
you would ever need to protect that game.

This is so important to get
across, is what we're doing.

So killing, uh, as you said is, is
commoditized, but they're gonna die.

They're at the end their life
cycle and so slow, hideous death.

and we can get value from that
death, but we honor that creature,

uh, we honor their memory.

And uh, and the money goes
back into the community.

It's, it's brilliant.

And I, I never saw that coming.

And Linda just, and Linda and Keith
and their, uh, uh, in their, uh, their

own safari had really given great
information to make that come alive.

Is that, does that tie in Keith, you know,
from your perspective in there, I'm sure.

Was there a.

I, I have trouble hearing Keith.

I have trouble hearing Dave
so I'm not sure if there was

a question in there for me.

Yeah, just been around gunfire too long.

Keith , thank you for that compliment.

, what was the question?

Just what, what, what you had to, to, to
add into that equation of, that the, the

hunting and your experiences in Namibia
and how, how it kind of framed this

model of the, the economics uh, of, uh,
of the the hunter in the modern world.

It was incredibly obvious, uh, when you go
and hunt on those, uh, uh, conservatories

and, uh, and deal with the, the PH's and
all of their, uh, trackers, uh, exactly

how all that model, uh, is playing out.

And it was, it was just so obvious.

Uh, it would be good if our own,
our, our own, uh, lawmakers here

were to, to see that sort of stuff.

One of the things that really stuck
in my mind is, uh, the pH told us,

uh, of a drought that was going on,
uh, in the land, uh, and, uh, the

animals on his conservatory 25,000
acres were starving to death.

Uh, and so he had to bring in feed,
uh, and it wasn't a lot, it was just

enough to try to keep them, them going.

You had to bring in feed and, and feed
the animals until the next rain came.

Uh, and it was hunters that, uh,
that backed him on that with money.

There wasn't one anti gunner, one
greenie one, anybody else at all,

uh, that helped him with that.

Uh, except the hunters.

And I think that says a whole lot right
there we're the ones that give a damn.

Amen.

Why do you think that is?

Because there's nothing.

Oh, I was gonna say, why
do you think that is?

Cuz there's nothing stopping
the bird watcher from buying a.

A migratory bird tag.

There's nothing stopping the hiker or
the photographer from going out and

contributing to conservation in the
exact same way that that hunters do.

Well, I think that why,
why is it the hunters?

Well, I think it is because if, if,
if, uh, anti hunter goes out and

buy and, and buys a tag, the concept
is that he's supporting hunting.

Uh, and in fact, if it was to ever get
out that if they wanted to reduce the

number of animals killed in a hunt, All
they gotta do is go out and buy every

tag, uh, that's available out there,

Uh, but we won't let that get out.

Don't do that.

We won't let that get out.

. So some,

sometimes they do that.

I, for example, when the grizzly bear
hunt in British Columbia was permissible

right now it currently isn't, uh, there
are indigenous groups that are like,

they're saying, look at the conservation
of our grizzly, uh, population

is not being addressed properly.

And we are now taking matters into our
own hands, and we are initiating calls

or putting bounties on the grizzlies.

I mean, the idea of this, this feel good,
uh, live and let live and everything

lives it, it sounds good in theory,
but the reality of humanity in recorded

history would say that it doesn't play
out in prac in the practical world.

And there's probably a reason why.

Like maybe the life death cycle
and that struggle both in the human

sense as well as as with animals,
is just an innate part of us.

And I think you guys touch
on that in a way in the book

that that's really intriguing.

Well, I think the anti hunters, uh, just
simply don't know what they don't know.

Uh, they're a very emotional bunch, uh,
and they go off in, in, in that, uh,

tangeant they don't, um, look into it.

They don't study it.

They just don't know what they don't know.

They figure, well, you're killing animals.

You must be doing it all wrong.

Well, they're wrong.

, uh, you know, , there's, there's more
conservation, uh, from us hunters than

than they ever thought of providing.

How do we get that message to them?

How do we get that message in a way
where everyone's pushing together in

a, in the, cuz we've got the same goals.

We all want to see the animals.

We all want to, it's not as
Shane Mahoney would say, that we

have dominion over the animals.

It's that we are one of them and we
all work together in a certain way.

And I believe that the anti-hunters
and the hunters both want that

same goal of having, having our
ecosystem, having natural resources,

having the animals around,

but we're approaching it
from two different ways.

How do we kind of get in the same line?

I think, I think the, if we can, I think
we gotta pursue exactly what we're doing.

I think, uh, they pursue it from the
emotional side, and of course the hunters

pursue it from the scientific side.

Uh, we got lots of biologists
out there that are, that are, uh,

saying the way it needs to be done.

And I think we just need to, uh, you
know Steer the steady course and uh,

and keep doing that and you, you hear
a little bit less, I don't think I hear

so much protesting as there used to be.

And I think a lot of the protestors
are maybe starting to have a bit of

this scientific logic dribble into
their little, their little brains.

Uh, and it may be starting to, to show up
just a little wee bit now, and I think if

we just keep on doin it there's lots and
lots of good models out there, Africa.

It, it has lots of good models on how
it happens, you know, here, uh, in North

America we've got more, we've got more
deer, moose and elk than we ever had,

uh, you know, in the last hundred years.

Uh, it's working and I think
we just gotta stay the course,

educate them whenever we can.

When is the last time that
rational, oh, sorry Dave, go on.

Don't, I was gonna say, if we
could just write a really powerful

book on this subject, a book that
hunters could say, here, read,

read this, and you'll understand.

If we could just, yeah.

If somebody would just write this
book and, and, and then Hunters can

grab this book and shove it at 'em.

Say, here, read this
now, you'll understand.

If only somebody could
just write that book.

. Well, I, yes.

I think one of the things we have
to be a little careful about is

that the hunters is fewer than 10%.

The anti-hunters, as far as we can
figure, are something fewer than 5% in

between are a whole bunch of non-hunters.

For a vast number of reasons.

They just don't hunt and we've, we spent
the last week doing an audio book with a

fellow who fell in that category and he
was absolutely educated, moved astonished.

And said he felt blessed.

It was a life-changing event
for him to listen to our book.

So I think it's that vast middle
group that, that we can reach and,

and get some effective traction.

I didn't realize that those numbers,
I didn't realize from the way that

the anti hunters speak and have their
voice herd, you would think they far

outweigh the, the lowly hunters here.

The, the few far and few between.

I didn't realize that we almost,
hunters almost double anti-hunting.

That's interesting.

The rest of this apathetic, well,
huge, huge number of, of, of votes and

determination and strength are with
the non-hunters and they're a much

more amenable group to our message.

I can't think of the last time when
I've been able to use rational, logical

thought to combat an emotional argument.

And I think that's where the
campfire stories like what you're

contributing there, Keith, are
extremely important because we're

humans, are storytellers at heart.

I mean, we are drawn to the story.

We're drawn to the visual story, the
audio story, the whatever it might.

And sitting around a campfire
is as old as fire itself.

I mean, soldiers, they would talk
about having Hexie tv, right?

Which is the little hexamine tablets,
and they sit there watching that thing

zoning out, and it's a bit of an escape.

and the, yeah, the Hexie tv.

Combining that with the stories of how
things have been done in the past is

the traditional way, how we've always
carried that information forward and I,

personally, I think you guys are probably
touching on that key piece because it,

the emotional argument side doesn't want
to listen to facts, but if you can touch

that emotional side through the story that
incorporates those facts, I think that's

probably the best possible solution here.

I think you can start most
discussions with the anti hunters

with three words, Kenya and Namibia.

Go off and study those two from
a hunting point of view, and,

and you'll see the difference.

Ah, and then you can stick our book in
their face or maybe even slap them with

it . But the, the other powerful component
that I didn't see coming until we all got

together and did it, was this audio book.

I don't think there's ever been an audio
book like it, uh, Keith was reading the,

the, the summaries and the forwards.

And then a chapter title.

So went a subtitle, a section title.

So, and then he read the campfire stories.

And then, you know, we, all these
wonderful, wonderful quotes that,

that Linda had pulled together,
the best words for the best people.

She read all the quotes, and then I read,
you know, kind of the text in between

and, and, and so there's all of us.

But what's really cool is the
guy who did the recording, he

was doing all kinds of outtakes.

We would say, oh, by the way, you
know, here's what happened here.

And we'd laugh about this
and we'd fumble over this

And so this may be the first audio
book ever done with an outtakes reel

that allows people, oh, that's awesome.

People to dig deep.

It's just so much fun.

, you gotta listen to the audio.

It's gonna be fun and it will be part
of the tool that allows us to, to

get this information in their hands.

You know, you, you know, you go for a
drive, you plug in an audiobook, and you

listen an hour a day during your commute.

Uh, at the end of this book, you
will be informed and transformed.

And, and again, with Keith's, uh, you
know, the, those campfire stories and

uh, those great quotes, uh, it comes
together to form something very powerful.

I think those outtakes are, are
important too, cuz it humanizes you.

Yeah.

Instead of that professional at
the other end of the microphone,

that's just relaying information.

They're like, oh, okay.

Yeah.

They're imperfect just like me.

Or they, they, they can make mistakes or
get upset or flub things just like me.

And that humanizing process
is something that I, I see.

Um, modern social media and the way that
people communicate it seems to be, Have a

dehumanizing approach to it and it creates
an us against them sort of mentality.

And when we can start looking at people
that we would say as the opposition

or the other side and realize that
their goals and intentions by and

large will align very much with our
own and one-on-one dealing with them,

they're pretty darn good people.

Yes.

Uh, yes.

We just seem to differ on a few
different ways of Implica application

that humanization is hugely, important.

you know, from the perspective of that.

Talking about, so we're
talking about ethics.

Yeah.

Linda, tell him about on runting.

I can't remember what I said.

I said something about on runting.

It seemed right to me at the time,
and Keith came back with what?

Um, let's write a book on, on runting.

On runting?

It seemed funnier at the time.

I'm not sure . Yeah.

So capture as you're knee
deep into all this stuff.

And after a full long week of
recording the audio, oh, let's

write our next book, on runting.

You'll, you'll hear in more
details in the, in the outtakes.

So eth ethics, would you brought
those up as one of the important

pieces of the puzzle in here.

So ex ethics, I always remember because,
so we hold the contract for online

hunter education in British Columbia.

One of the things that the province
wants, uh, BC residents to know is the

difference between morals and ethics and
how ethics apply and how morals apply.

And, you know, ethics are external.

Morals are my own right.

Ethics are something that's kind
of, everyone agrees on together.

And morals are something that I will
hold to myself and it's a standard

that I'm, I need to be able to meet.

So ethics are gonna change
depending on where we are.

People will have different ethics in
different areas of the world that

have, had the culture and the group hold
things perhaps a little bit differently.

What was the take in the book on, was it
thought to try and systemize ethics and

so everyone's basically on the same page?

Not, not at all.

Not at all.

No.

Okay.

It's more, uh, an explanation of what
ethics is, what some types of ethics are.

So some people think they're being
ethical if they follow all the rules.

And some people think they're ethical
if they're, um, one step closer to God.

Do you know what I mean?

Like they're, yes.

Yeah.

It's a very, very different kind of,
of set of ethics, and most people

subscribe to a few ethics from half
a dozen different types of ethics,

and, and you're exactly right.

They're culturalized, so they, it
isn't one size fits all at all.

You, you really need to come to
terms with your own moral behavior.

And, uh, I guess my favorite line
in the book on that is that, uh,

morals and ethics are the things
that you do when nobody's watching.

Right.

But that brings us back, back to
something really important, Had a

um, was that, that Hunter's oath?

Talk about that, Linda.

So there is this, you know, with all
that said, there's still the hunters oath

that you introduced that's so powerful.

Yep.

And that's, that's Keith Bailiwick.

Yeah.

Well, I don't, I don't have it memorized
and I don't have, I was just looking

around here to see if there was a, a copy.

Linda has the copy in there and, uh, and
the hunter's oath is in there someplace.

And it's a good sort of general,
general statement to, uh, to follow

from an ethics point of view.

Linda's looking for, well, perhaps,
perhaps I add that to the description,

but, in what we do here in the, on the
video, in the audio format, and people

can have a copy of the Hunter's Oath
that they can kind of, uh, look at.

But, uh, if that's all
right with you guys.

You bet.

But maybe we just talk about it generally
and, and it wraps up, the book, wraps up

with the Hunter's prayer, which is also
another, you know, it, it actually began

as I understand the sniper's prayer.

and it evolved into this hunter's prayer.

And that's another one of,
uh, Linda and Keith's amazing

contributions to the community.

We've got a, well, that's a very,
we've got a book on the go right

now called The Sniper's Prayer.

Um, and, uh, and Linda wrote in
the back, uh, the Sniper's Prayer.

Uh, and it, what what's amazing
about that, of course, is

that Linda was never a sniper.

She was never in the military.

Uh, and yet she captured , the
whole essence of, of what

it's like, uh, to be a sniper.

Well, there's a very similar,
very thin line between being

a sniper and being a hunter.

Uh, and so she, uh, she changed the
words slightly and turned it into

the hunter's prayer, and that's,
that's in the book, uh, as well.

And uh, they're just amazing.

Did you find the oath there, Linda?

I did find the oath.

Do you want me to read it?

Yes, please.

I can do that.

I have the capability.

The Hunter's Oath by Captain Keith A.

Cunningham.

I pledge on my honor as a hunter
to follow the laws of nature

always to hunt ethically and
to obey the laws of the land.

I further pledge to develop and maintain
the skills required to develop an

effective and humane shot to my quarry.

I promise to always do everything within
my power to recover my game animal and

use it with respect for the life given.

Oh, I like that . That's so,
and it's so simple and it wraps,

it wraps up what a hunter is.

Very succinct.

Succinctly.

Yep.

Yeah, because anyone outside
of that is a poacher.

That's right.

Yeah.

That's right.

Yep.

I, I mean, there's, and, and
if, sorry, go, go on Linda.

If you're, if you're not following all
of those elements, you might wanna just

take a little look inside next time you're
sitting in a tree stand and wondering

what you need to be spending your time on.

Just take a look at that oath and see
if you have done everything, all of

those elements as well as you want to.

You know, it's very easy for
people to get caught up in the

competition of it all right?

When they spend so much money to
get their kit and gear, when they

spend so many seasons chasing
game and being unsuccessful.

When they uh, travel to a remote location
or they take time off of work and they

start getting very, the goal for people
can quite often be the animal, I've

gotta get this animal, and sometimes
otherwise, ethical people are people

that you would view as ethical, can
get caught up in the, the excitement

or the competition, or the ego, or
whatever it might be of the moment.

And really challenge what
their core beliefs are.

And I remember, you know, any hunter
out there who's been hunting for

some time will have a story of when
their ethics are put to the test,

when their morals are put to the
test, and how they responded to that.

I, I remember even just last season,
a friend of mine says, let's go out.

We, neither of us were able to
get a draw in BC for a bull moose.

But, they've got an open season in this
one area for Spike Fork, so they've gotta

have a maximum of two on, uh, on one side.

And, uh, let's see what we can do.

And we were putting in long hours trekking
through swamps and, uh, recovering tons

of territory on a, uh, side by side.

Tons of, tons of territory by foot.

And anyways, one evening we're
driving back to base camp.

Going out the hill, we're about a
half a kilometer away from base camp.

But what do we see?

Two moose ske daddling up the
road and first thing you go is

like, holy crow, look at that.

You look and it's, that's a spike fork.

It's a legal.

It's one that it's a legal
animal that we are allowed to

harvest, we're allowed to take.

And you're looking at this and look
at the watch and it's like, nah,

we're, we're about five minutes after
last light can't do it . But for a

lot of people they would say, who's
gonna know ? Nobody's gonna see this.

Right.

The problem is you take that and
the worst part about these two moose

was we're we sat down, we look at
each other and say, no, it's, it's

after last light, we can't do it.

Let's just let 'em skedaddle.

So we wait and they go around the corner.

We give 'em about 20 minutes or so,
cuz they were kind of going slow.

We go around the corner there they are
still like, they just weren't going and

we've been searching forever for these.

But the problem is you go home.

Are you gonna enjoy that?

Are you gonna be able to tell that
story afterwards around the campfire and

say, oh, that one time, we were able to
shoot those animals after last light.

Are you gonna, every time you eat it,
you're gonna remember the time that

you were a poacher and not a hunter.

It's just not worth it.

Yep.

You were an ethical hunter, sir.

Well, there's always gonna be times when
those ethics are put to the test, right?

It's, it's in those moments that you can
then turn around afterwards and be proud

of yourself and share that experience
with others and share it with your

family and your children and, and, uh,
hope hopefully that bleeds off in others

and you build an environment of people
who are sharing those same core values.

What was that saying the other day, Dave?

Somebody said, you don't
convert people by evangelism.

You convert people by your own behavior.

Yeah.

Better to live the
sermon than to preach it.

There it is.

Yeah.

What was it Better to what better to
live the sermon than to preach it?

Oh, yeah.

I, I a thousand percent believe
that the example is the best

way of leadership, right?

Everyone has that rules for thee or,
or he rules for you, but not for thee.

And yeah, when they talk about
politicians, the ones that we truly

admire and truly respect are the
ones who will actually walk the walk.

And they will do what they say
and maybe not so much out there

preaching to everyone else, telling
them what's up and how to do it.

But you can see through their
example that they're living the

lifestyle that you aspire to.

That's a, that's one of the things in
this book that, uh, I would imagine would

be a difficult thing because if you're
coming across as an authority and you're

trying to provide the information, is to
walk that delicate tightrope of telling

people what's up with a wagging finger

and laying out information
on the table for them to be

able to make a decision from.

Actually, it's pretty easy.

Well, I think you guys made it look easy.

We, we went through a voyage of discovery
and, and if you remember your own voyage,

it's very much easier to tell the story
in a way that other people can share

your voyage rather than you telling
them where they have to moor the boat.

Mm.

. So when we look at hunting and over in
North America, this is predominantly,

there's a term that a, another fellow
runs a business here in Vancouver.

He taught me about, he calls 'em "GOWD's"
G O W D's I'm like, what is a GOWD?

He's like, it's a grumpy
old white dude, right?

And that's the stereotypical hunter of
the past is this grumpy old white dude.

Like, you can't come on this area.

This is my land.

My area.

I've been hunting it all this time.

And, um, they're trying to take away
my rights and they're trying to,

and there's a, there's this negative
connotation associated with hunting

by a lot of anti-hunters and, and new
people getting into hunting as well.

There's a barrier to entry and one
thing that I was talking about with

the executive director of the Wildlife
Federation in the podcast that just

released recently was how the face of
hunting is changing and the demographics

are changing and the way that we are
able to incorporate traditional belief

systems and values into all of those who
are getting in, who come from different

backgrounds and different ways of life.

And I think the future of hunting as it's
being approached currently is actually

looking pretty optimistic , but I'd
be curious, after all of the research

you've done in "On Hunting", what does
the future of hunting look like to you?

I think there's, there's enough biological
or biologists out there who are, are, who

are preaching the importance of hunting.

I think it's got, uh, it's got legs yet.

Um, I don't think the, the
greens are, uh, and anti hunters.

Are, are loud enough yet or
to, to take that away from us?

I think it has, it has a future.

I think it'll continue for,
you know, generations yet.

And that might be me wishful
thinking, but I think that's . I I

also am very hopeful that we'll vote
Trudeau out to Mexico around too.

And so if we just, if we just
think positively enough about it

all, it just may come to pass.

Well, you and the majority
of other Canadians according

to recent polls or teeth.

Yes.

Yes.

Thank goodness.

And I see that the liberals
are, I I did, go ahead, Linda.

I did a lot of research, uh, of, um,
trends around the world and what I found

now, it was hard to get really recent
numbers because we were in the middle

of a pandemic and nobody was doing
anything, including gathering stats.

They were busy taking
care of the home fires.

But, um, the trend since certainly
the early 2010s or so, has been for

hunting numbers to be increasing in
most areas around the world, and for

the percentage of females hunting to
be increasing Now, it, there's a huge

barrier to entry for women, and it's
not, it's not what you might think, it's

that they don't know how to get started.

They don't know where
to go to get started.

So we do have some
suggestions in the book.

There are some universities
running courses.

There are, um, in fact, one of our
dear friends just started hunting

by going and getting a guided hunt.

Now it was for Turkey.

It wasn't an expensive hunt, but it,
it gave her an opportunity to, to be

schooled in some of the ways of hunting
that you don't, you don't necessarily

get from reading a book or trying to
figure out what your granddad might

have been doing with that old gun.

So I think there's a, a lot of hope.

I honestly, in complete candor and
humility, think that the On Hunting

book will give support to those people
so that they'll see that, yeah, I'm,

I'm part of a growing community here.

I'm, I'm not a freak.

Uh, this is really something that's right
for people to do and, and really right

for women to do, to get involved in.

So I, I'm also optimistic.

I think it's interesting.

Linda talked about some of, if not
the, Linda talked about a, uh, an

anti-hunter online and he said,
well, I support the World Wildlife

Foundation and I contribute to them.

And, but guess what, uh, they support
hunting as a part of conservation

and, uh, and that's a victory.

Mm-hmm.

, that their, their official position
supports hunting is part of conservation.

You know, you, I got the little stuff.

Panda.

Panda, you know, and I, I support the
animals and, and WWF is that right?

Is that right?

Uh, Linda, I get that.

Yeah.

WWF, I didn't realize that they
were supporters of hunting.

Yes.

Yep.

They, they aren't as noisy about
it the last couple of years as they

have been in the past, but they
have stood with hunting and hunters.

Because they see what the economics are.

The money comes from the hunters and
the animals benefit and they, they get

that cuz that's what their mission is.

I, I think from a societal standpoint,
when we looked at the last few years going

through the covid, lockdowns and pandemic
and all the rest, that, that associated

with that there was a, uh, a rekindled
fire in people to want to get outdoors.

To wanna learn some traditional skills
to be self-sufficient to, and that

combined with the movement, the food
movement of knowing where your food

comes from, local sustainable food.

And I think the pendulum of moving
away from hunting, I think the

pendulum is starting to swing a bit
because people are having a difficult

time trusting where their food.

Uh, the chemicals that might be
used and how the farms are, are, uh,

treating the animals that they might
be getting and they're looking at the

hunting for more than just that one
split second when the trigger is pulled

or the arrow is let, loose hunting
is everything that surrounds that.

It's a lifestyle of being in tune with
the nature of being in tune with the

animals, of being in tune with the
seasons that are, and there's a very

natural part to the human condition
that I think is drawn towards that.

I think we're moving away from this.

Everything comes in processed food
and where here's one pill you could

take a day and you get all your
vitamins and nutrients from it.

And I think people are realizing
the sort of spiritual side of just

being out and communing with nature
that's associated with hunting.

And most people will never, if
they haven't hunted, will not

experience the range of emotions
and connectedness to their natural

environment like those who do hunt.

100%.

Amen.

There's a quote that you guys have
in the book that I really liked.

Let me see if I can pull
that up really quick.

And it's, um, yeah, here it is.

It says, one of the delights
of hunting is getting mentally

and emotionally lost in nature.

It is a total absorption
in the present moment.

The reality of everyday anxiety
fades and the hunter becomes

immersed in the natural world.

He feels connected to something
much bigger than himself.

Can you guys talk a bit more on that?

Like, what is that to you?

That's, that's what it's all about.

That's the hunter who goes out on the
first day of the season, sees his,

the kind of animal that is perfect
for him to take and doesn't take

it because he doesn't want the hunt
to be over in less than 24 hours.

He wants to hold onto that
feeling for as long as he can.

and, and yes, get his game animal
if he can, but it's being there

for that feeling that puts him in
the bush and keeps him coming back.

Uh, I think I agree with, I agree with
Linda, although there certainly has been

times when I have spent lots and lots of
cold, wet, miserable days out there and

not seen anything, um, that I am sometimes
fearful not to take the first one.

Uh, the first good one that comes along.

You know, the old saying, yep, don't
bypass, uh, on the first day, the

one you'd take on the last day.

Uh, so there is, there is that to it.

But, but certainly being out, being
out in the wilderness, being out in

the bushes, I've often said I get
a much more spiritual, uh, feeling,

um, being out in the bush than I ever
did when my grandmother used to drag

me to church and make me sit in the,
in the shadow of, of stained glass.

And hard back seats.

Um, if mm-hmm.

, if I could, if I, I really like
the, the religion that the, that

the natives had where everything
had a spirit out in the bush.

Uh, and, uh, and that's, that's
where I'm most at, certainly

most at peace out there.

You know, I think, how about you, Dave.

Yeah.

One of the, one of the pathologies
of modern life is thinking

that you don't have to kill.

you're taking yourself out
of the natural cycle of life.

It's a, it's a deep pathology.

Well, you know, I, I'm a, I'm vegan.

Well, we exterminate billions of rats and
mice around the graineries every year.

Otherwise, they would get in the
graineries and they would reproduce

exponentially, and we would all starve.

Your body right now is killing
millions of microorganisms.

When you stop doing that,
your body rots and dies.

to live is to kill and to think that you
don't have to kill because you buy it

packaged in this store or you, you get it
secondhand and just, I'm a vegan, right?

But all of these creatures had to die
and all of this, this piece of land had

to be turned into farmland so that you
could be a vegan yet to live is to kill.

And, and, and so hunters are
in two, you said, oh, I can be

spiritual, I can be in the woods.

I can identify.

No.

If you're not part of that cycle of
life, and that's one of the things that

Linda has nailed over and over again, if
you're not part of that cycle of life,

if and hunters truly understand death,
that that deer died so I can live and I

will die and I will be warm food someday.

And that's okay.

You know, one of the things
that, that anti, well, how

would you like to be eaten?

Well, you will be . You,
you just don't know it.

Something's gonna consume you, right?

Ashes.

Ashes dusted dust you miss.

Um, what would you guys view as
a success for this book once it's

done, you know, number of copies
sold, uh, messages received.

What?

What would be the ultimate success?

Once this book is out into the
general public for you, I think

if we could get more people, uh,
thinking the way our sound engineer,

um, has, where he is a non hunter,
he's certainly not against hunting.

He's just didn't do it.

Uh, and, uh, he ex explained to us
in, in incredibly wonderful terms

just what this book has done for him.

And, and he listened to it.

, he got emotional at the, at the,
the parts that, uh, we intended

people to get emotional at.

And, and he absorbed that book
and, uh, it has turned him around.

And I think if we could get, and
Linda mentioned that crowd before,

uh, the non-hunters, uh, is a
much bigger group than either

the anti hunters or the hunters.

And if we get more people of the
non-hunting to, uh, read that

book and just simply understand
where we're coming from.

Uh, I think that would be
a, a great, great success.

Just, just more of what Rick did.

Yep.

I agree with that.

Uh, one of the fellas that kindly read
through the manuscript told was right

near the last draft, um, who's a non
hunter, uh, but a very meticulous person.

He read through it and he came back
and said, you could call this book on

humans instead of on hunting, because
it's really about every one of us.

And every person that reads it, that
comes away with that in their mind.

Success.

You know, Travis, I, uh, I co opted
a book on gun control with Glen Beck.

They're called Control
the Truth About Guns.

New York Times Bestseller, not
one single review, nobody nowhere.

They just give it zero oxygen.

And, and if, if, and the point is
that we've gotta have hunters that are

inflicting this book on non-hunters.

We've gotta create a buzz, we've
gotta create an energy, and we've got

this tool that we can place in their
hands, but they've got the turnaround.

And, uh, and, and have your kids read it.

Have your, your relative read it.

Uh uh, and, and we gotta get through that.

You know, when, when you write
about hunting, when you write about

guns, they will automatically censor
it and they give it zero oxygen.

So all the hunters out
there and all the people.

Who love our way of life and
understand what this's about.

They've got to become, you know, they've
gotta become missionaries, you know,

and, uh, uh, you know, it's, it's,
oh, you're preaching to the choir.

Well, you're preaching to the choir,
you get missionaries, you know, so let's

go out there and, you know, evangelize
for our faith, which is, is as, uh,

as Keith said is, is out there in the
forest being a part of that food cycle.

And this is the tool that you can
use to, to, to make that transition.

For, to be the, the, the evangelists,
the, the missionary that will take our,

our, our faith and, and our beliefs and
put it in the hands of others so they

understand it and embrace that dynamic.

And it truly will bring you deeper into
understand of humanity even if you never

hunt, even if you never have hunted.

This book will give you far, far deeper
understanding of our humanity, who we are,

what we do, and our place in the world.

So success would be all those hunters
out there grabbing this book and, and

creating buzz about it, and talking on
Facebook and talking online and, and

wonderful, wonderful podcasts like yours.

Now, picking up on this and
help us get the word out.

You know, as you're talking there, I
get this image of people not in white

shirts and black ties but dressed up
in camouflage two by two, going through

neighborhoods, knocking on doors.

Have you heard the good word?

. Hold it.

Hold it up.

Hold it up On Hunting.

That's outstanding.

Maybe they won't get the door
slammed in their faces often.

Oh man.

Is there anything that we should be
talking about that we haven't already

talked about before we wrap things up?

I think we've.

Okay.

Well, I tell you what, I'm gonna make
sure we have links to where people

can buy the book, where they can find
out more information on the book.

We'll put this, it's
gonna be up on YouTube.

It'll be up on the podcast.

Linda, Keith.

Dave, thank you so very much for
taking the time to write this book

and for taking the time to be on the
Silver Core podcast to talk about it.

Appreciate it.

Thank you, Travis.

Thank you Travis, for all you do, Amen.