WE HUNG THEM ON THE WALL
When talking to several backpackers, who live in Foster City, CA, I was told that they shot many wild animals, which were plentiful in the Sierras. "We shot deer, owls, and any thing we could see, and you know, it's not against the law. Oh, by the way, we used a camera to shoot the animals." they said with a smile.
Hunting animals with a camera can be fun. It can be a sport that does not hurt the animals, and you can bring back the animals and mount them on the wall.
It is a safe sport too. If you have a zoom lens, you can stand several hundred yards or feet from the animal and bring it up close. You will capture what ever is in your lens. You can change the lens by using different filters and still not hurt your subject.
Another way of hunting animals is with a video-camera. The only problem you might have is the camera's noise, if you are standing to close, which will scare your subject away. But with the camera's zoom lens, you can stand several yards or feet away and still get good pictures. The great thing about the video-camera, you dont have to have the film developed and printed.
With the new types of cameras--disposable, after once used; digital, instant pictures, etc.--you don't even have to worry about forgetting your camera. You can buy a disposable camera in almost any store, take your pictures and have them developed. There are many types of disposable cameras: one for underwater, one for close-ups, a panoramtic camera, and a standard camera.
Like the backpackers said, "We shot the wild animals and will be hanging them on our walls."
