The Hunter's Way: A Guide to the Heart and Soul of Hunting Audiobook (Free) | AudioBooksLoft

The Hunter’s Way: A Guide to the Heart and Soul of Hunting Audiobook (Free)

Summary:

“Craig Raleigh places hunting into modern perspective, combining higher sensibilities and his firsthand understanding in to the hunting globe to gently illuminate a part of individual nature that was, but still is, among the purest of human efforts.” -Jim Shockey, award-winning writer and sponsor of Jim Shockey’s Hunting Journeys and Uncharted

A thoughtful appreciation of hunting and a celebration of the outdoors that illuminates the hunter’s psyche, role, and impact on our culture.

‘As we started to about The Hunter’s Way: HELPFUL INFORMATION to the Heart and Soul of Hunting collection foot in the outdoors we didn’t be prepared to learn something beyond where in fact the deer were running or where in fact the ducks had been flying. After we recognized what these creatures really wanted, it was the opening of truth for all of us as hunters.’

A long-time hunter and fisherman and senior writer at WIDELY OPEN Spaces, Craig Raleigh has spent most of the last forty-five years of his lifestyle trying to find that elusive ULTIMATE GOAL of hunting, that unimagined outdoor fact where one’s training, instinct, and experience converge into extraordinary bliss and achievement. He is the first to admit, that this does not entail the catch of the deer or an ever-evasive pheasant. It’s the freedom to give back to the outdoors as much as you takes from it. For hunters, a existence lived in the outdoors is definitely massively rewarding and will be offering nonstop pleasures. It comes with the love of camaraderie, choice, and compensate, and provides a deep appreciation for the nature world.

The Hunter’s Way is his meditative and philosophical journey into the soul of the hunter. Divided into four parts that mirror the hunting experience-the background, the preparation, the hunt, as well as the harvest-it addresses the paradox of hunting as conservationism, ruminates within the failures and successes of hunting as sport and as a way of life, and reveals how hunting affects our society.

While Raleigh explains, the hunt is so much more compared to the kill. Most often, the hunter leaves the woods and areas empty-handed. Rather, the wonder of hunting is in the knowledge itself. Being a hunter, you are continuously looking for clues. Yet in character, indications are changeable, confusing, rather than the same the second time. A fascinating synthesis of On Trails, Norwegian Timber, and Shop Course as Soulcraft, The Hunter’s Way is certainly a literary reflection and love notice to the value of hunting as both sport and life-style.