We've been seeing disturbing signs they throw for some time now a dark shadow on the future of our passion. Threats that come not only from animal rights or blatantly anti-hunt, but from worlds that should be close to us or even from within ourselves. Beyond the declarations that have appeared in recent days, in fact, our country has begun to hover again a great desire to reserve, a deleterious return to private hunting. A desire for privatization that we can understand in farmers, although obviously not sharing, but that leaves us amazed when it comes from a hunting association.
If, in fact, we have read with concern the bills coming from the agricultural world, we welcomed with astonishment the interest in the same positions of Federcaccia and EPS, which in Tuscany is an integral part of the phantom CCT. The fundamental points of the proposal, in fact, foresee a strict zoning of hunting for sedentary game and the possibility for farmers to slaughter ungulates on their own grounds, in addition to sending the animals slaughtered by the teams to the supply chain.
Definitely a little reassuring picture for the poor hunters of the future, forced into ever smaller reserves like modern Sioux, to chase game ready to hunt or relegated to the role of felling operators for farmers; bad end for team hunters, hitherto engaged managers of the territory. Obviously, Arci Caccia shuns this perspective, which has no appeal for us. For us, the hunt for the future will obviously have to open up to change, while remaining firmly anchored to those values of sustainability and sociality which have made it an activity accessible to all income brackets, not just those who usually hunt in "reserves".