Added: 2 years ago
From: LivingHistorySchool
Views: 28,041
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (80)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • I like it!Wouldn't try it here cause I would shot but very cool.

  • that is amazing. Iread about a sweat lodge (?) in a Tom Brown jr.book once.

    Very inspiring stuff, thanks!

    Philipp

  • Thanx for a vid [finally] that does`nt disrespect or make fun of, Native living skills.

    To add, I would put a sage leaf [raw] in my mouth to mask my bad breath...

    Two Pigmy Mammoth were feeding on grass,when one turns to the other & says,"Ouch,I think that f-n deer just shot me"!!

  • I wonder if they had hunting accidents? no orange vests ! lol

  • Im a bowhunter..when you are talking about calling bucks in with the antlers, that is called "rattling" and we still do that today, you use it around the beginning of the rut when the first does start to come into heat and bucks will fight over the does to breed them.. It imitates 2 bucks fighting.And you usually use a set of antlers(about the same size,and a left side with a right side) The bucks will come in running ..doesnt work every time tho

  • it seems like if u get sad at the end of the vid ........

  • i wouldnt wear that during hunting season. kinda dangerous.

  • Some good info. Thanks for sharing.

  • people get shot wearing bright orange during hunting season... great lesson but dude some idiot is going to try this

  • @LivingHistorySchool Do you know how Apache hid under grass?  I remember hearing about this style of hunting when I was reading about the Apache, and that got me thinking about something I read about hiding under grass (it was in Life Among the Apache). It was a method of hiding, but it didn't seem to really describe how to do it.

  • I've subscribed.

  • Good one. Thank you. This is the method was documented by Temple Saxton Pope circa 1920. It was a technique used by Ishi the last wild Indian taken into captivity in 1911 in Northern California -- a Southern Yahi (Yana Indian). His book is titled, "Hunting with the Bow and Arrow". You can get it online at: en(dot)wikipedia(dot)org/wiki/­Saxton_Pope

  • Be careful rattling the big bucks out during rutting season. They hear you and they are coming to fight. Sometimes they will even attack, and you can't scare them away. They become delirious from being in rut.

  • Really like the becoming the deer, deer hunting of the first people. How do you cape the dear like that to make deer head?  Thanks

  • You are bit nervous :) but thats all right :) im nervous too sometimes

  • Very interesting video I wonder if the native peoples kept deer as edible pets in the old days. thanks

  • 5*******

  • Thank you for this informative video! My 3rd grader had to write a report on something about Michigan. She couldn't choose a broader topic to research such as the Ottawa or Chippewa Indian tribes. She decided to specifically choose Indians hunting. Then we had to tie this to Michigan. Your video helped her part of the way and we were able to relate it to a recent consent decree about the Treaty of Washington,1836 (hunting rights in xchange for land)

  • @jb48197 your welcome... we do lots of field trips for 3rd graders

  • @LivingHistorySchool Keep these video's coming. if i ever got stranded i would want to be by your side

  • I'll have to try that antler rattling sometime.

  • Hunters still rattle deer into range, using the same technique. And they still spot and stalk using camouflage and bows and arrows. There are still traditional hunters still using similar methods. Learning how to think how deer think, what they think about and how they will react are all tools in a modern bowhunters quiver.

  • Way more deer back then. If you try this now you will be shot.

  • @LivingHistorySchool I am not personally ShoShone im Hawaiian but my wife is and the culture is diminishing and less people speak the language now days but other parts still go strong like sweats and other stuff for instance....im not sure were to find it but i can find out and get back to you on that.

  • Kool video....i live on a shoshone rez and never herd of this method but i know that the people here mostly hunted mountain sheep....you should look up the Sheep Eaters videos its about the tribe here!

  • @xHaWHYaNx

    I only saw a You Tube video that was 56 seconds long.. is the full version somewhere...do you speak the language?

  • @LivingHistorySchool if you would how much would it cost for you to sell a set like that?

  • @ninjaboy780 if I did that you wouldn't learn anything

  • Interesting method, but not fair for the deer. Imagine the deer would be clothed like a human being to come closer to you to spike you!

  • @updrafttower

    lol

  • @updrafttower They didn't care about fairness, only getting food for the family.

  • @LongHuntre

    this is an "historical method"...not a modern method

  • yes the term first nations and native americans are used sometimes in the same sentence they mean the same thing ! I am part Mi'kmaq working on Mohawk Land

  • @daretohaveorangehair

    do you know the plant whisperer on You Tube he is Mi'kmaq, do you have one of those pointy hats...lol

  • @LivingHistorySchool lol no i havent seen the plant whisperer on utube but ill check him out, lol i dont wear a pointy hat....... yet but the futur is wide open! LOL

  • @daretohaveorangehair

    timwalkingbear is his channel name

  • nah im half native and from canada trust me we prefer the term native american and not indians... well the Mohawks and Mi'kmaq do at least again good video!

  • @daretohaveorangehair

    well maybe Canadians, not in US, and I believe it's "first nations" is the term used, I assume your French Canadian? so what tribe are you?

  • good video! one thing though, indians are from india Native Americans is what you mean!

  • @daretohaveorangehair

    all most all native peoples call themselves Indians, sorry only PC white people say otherwise

  • this is a cool show. needs to be on tv

  • so

    this is a good

    idea on why we should not do this

    cause

    we get a better chance of getting shot

    sorry but it true

    but overall good video

  • THIS IS A NATIVE CALIFORNIAN AND OREGON WAY OF HUNTING DEER

  • Fascinating!

  • @KAPichon

    THIS IS NOT A MODERN DEER HUNTING METHOD

  • ummm... I native American and I've never heard of this dressing game just to hunt deer. Maybe it was a practice with one tribe but in large this isn't how they hunted deer.

  • @connectingdots1

    Oregon and California tribes, which tribe Cherokee LOL

  • That is the North West Coastal region so it might be different in the Easteren Woodlands and in the South East

  • nice vid,

  • @smokedjonathan

    this is a historical way Indian people hunted deer, not a modern method

  • You look like Tom Green in the movie Freddy Got Fingered, when he's wearing that skin with blood and everything and he's screaming at the incoming cars on the road lol

  • Clever!

    It'd be funny as hell if while he was clicking the antlers if a dear ran at him :')

  • this guy i a beast, and this info will be useful in times to come

  • was a useful strategy for the hunters. Nice review!

  • Now a days they drink a 24 of beer and drive the roads with high powered rifles...all paid for by bleeding heart liberals.

  • I can` t even fathom the skill necessary to overcome the dificulties to succed in this kind of bowhunting. Respect to the First Nations Peoples!!!

  • Interesting, I never knew this. Thanks for the upload.

  • well this is an historical way Indian people hunted in the past...it's not a modern hunting technique

  • Excellent and Educational vid... great job, just keep making 'em with confidence. You deserved 5/5

  • like that very much

  • I watched a special on African Bushmen who's ancestry hunted deer during the HOT of day. Basically, because humans developed the capacity to sweat, the Bushmen could chase the deer until the deer actually passed-out from heat stroke. Pretty amazing. We sure are knieving creatures, eh? :)

  • yes the bushmen of the kalahari are excellent trackers too...cool language also ...lots of clicks when they speak

  • Yes, I meant to say "track the deer" instead of chase. They were also very efficient in their kill.

    Nice channel.

  • thanks...if you want you can subscribe so I can keep you posted...have a good night

  • @aspenmogul Whitetail deer regulate there body temperature by both sweat and panting. They sweat LESS because there fur assists in keeping moisture on their body's. Humans lose far more water during similar activities because our skin is directly exposed to the elements, thus the need for clothing. The hunting technique you speak of was undertaken more as a right of passage for men than a bona fide hunting strategy

  • @aspenmogul what are you saying,deers dont sweat?Maybe it was all together(fear because is hunted and sun and excessive runing)the deer passed out from stroke not heat stroke right? I say this because i also saw an experiment.when a sheep was tied next to a wolf although the wolf couldnt reach it ,died after few hours from prolonged stress-fear

  • I liked the method with the antlers and will try that next roe buck hunting opening. The big buck will be really pessed off and get in to shooting range. Thanks!

  • u should make a video of you going hunting for deer. It would be really cool and way cooler then your previous videos. But anyway good job!!!

  • I don't think that would be a good idea during deer season...I'm might get shot...but thanks for the suggestion

  • I like this channel.

    Keep up the good work man :).

  • thanks*****

  • Good stuff.

  • Cool information, I just don't think that I would go out in the woods dressed like that now days lol!

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more