Helicopter-based hunting in Fiordland
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Helicopter hunting of deer has occurred in the Fiordland area of New Zealand since the 1960s. As long ago as the 1920s, introduced European deer plagued the Fiordland National Park to the detriment of the native New Zealand flora and fauna. The New Zealand government placed a bounty on the deer, paying local hunters for each animal removed from the park. With the market for venison and deerskin, by the 1960s this had proved a lucrative enough business for several hunters to invest in helicopters, to travel fast through the rugged landscape.[1]
Deer populations plummeted as a result, and competition among hunters grew more fierce. Accusations of sabotage and the flouting of rules became common in this unregulated industry. Combined with a growing farm-raised deer industry, and the impact of by-kill due to 1080 poison, the helicopter hunting market declined steeply. However, its legacy lives on, as former hunting helicopters these days[update] carry tourists and hunters into the New Zealand wilderness.
Methods of capture
One method of capturing feral deer involved flying beside the fleeing deer and casting a capture net over the deer. Immediately afterwards a crew member would jump from the helicopter and tie and place the deer into "livey bags" for carrying out to the waiting farmers.
History
European settlers imported
Hunters used horses and
By 1970, more than sixty helicopters were being used for deer hunting and recovery. A two hundred deer kill count counted as a highly productive day, worth $17,000, though more crews averaged 100 kills. In 1973, venison prices soared further, resulting in increased illegal yet profitable helicopter hunts and reports of shootings, arson, sabotage, and fist fights. The RNZAF sent two Iroquis helicopters to prevent poaching and trespassing in what became known as the "Helicopter Wars" or "Deer Wars".[1][3]
Methods of in air transport
The crew of the “flying hunter” helicopter consisted of 3 men: pilot, shooter and knife hand. A larger helicopter would support this “flying hunter” helicopter: the bigger machine would transport the shot deer, suspended by a hook, under that helicopter; and also supply fuel to the hunter-unit.
Hunters had their bases in remote wilderness areas, either in huts, or living on moored vessels in the Fiordland sounds, used as helicopter pads.
Turn to deer farming
With the strong demand for “
As the skills of the hunters increased, the deer became more elusive, the wild deer population declined, demand for breeding stock for deer farms grew, and live-deer prices rose to $3,500 per beast. This live deer hunting industry, unique to New Zealand, became a way of life and a specialised culture. Accidents, injuries, helicopter crashes and, over 80[4] fatalities occurred increasingly common, as the hunters were often untrained and untrained with firearms and tranquillisers, though lucrative returns kept the hunters returning despite the danger.[5][6]
The New Zealand government intervened through legislation,[citation needed] policing and administration; the deer hunters considered this as harassment to their livelihood. There resulted in a difference in what the authorities and the deer hunters considered “fair play”. Changing tax laws, and deer farms breeding their own stock, bought about the end of this era. The deer now[update] repopulate the forest.
See also
Sources
- Rex Forrester, True Hunting Adventures
- Rex Forrester, The Chopper Boys
- Rex Forrester, The Helicopter Hunters
- Mike Bennett, The Venison Hunters
References
- ^ a b c d "Deer stalking and culling". Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand. New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu. Archived from the original on 2019-02-18. Retrieved 2019-02-06.
- ^ Noted. "The hard men of helicopter deer hunting". www.noted.co.nz. Retrieved 2020-02-18.
- ^ Taonga, New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu. "Helicopter wars". teara.govt.nz. Retrieved 2020-02-18.
- ^ Screen, NZ On. "Deer Wars | Television | NZ On Screen". www.nzonscreen.com. Retrieved 2020-02-18.
- ^ "Live deer capture: 'a wonderful time to be alive and to stay alive', says pioneer". Stuff. Retrieved 2020-02-18.
- ^ "Wild venison helicopter hunting supplies upmarket European and US restaurants". Stuff. Retrieved 2020-02-18.