User:The CSOTK/Still hunting

Still Hunting Still hunting is one of the most common methods of hunting in Alberta. When still hunting, one walks to a strategically superior region of prey density and waits for five to thirty minutes, or, if one can clearly see his prey and is waiting for a good shot, even longer. Often during this period of wait the hunter will often move on to the next step because of boredom: After this period of wait, the hunter will walk a short distance and repeat earlier steps of the process, or incorporate other methods of hunting. This is repeated until Legal Light, the time (a certain increment of time from dawn of dusk) at which hunting is no longer legal till the next day, or untill the hunter has an opportunity to harvest a prey animal. The most common animals upon which the Still-hunting method is practiced are White-tailed deer, mule deer, bighorn sheep, moose, and elk.