T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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9.1 | Noisy but exciting | MRMFG1::R_RUSSO | The Sportsman | Tue Nov 24 1987 16:48 | 10 |
|
I had a beagle once too. Same story. The lovely howling of a beagle
is music in the woods but sure isn't appreciated in a neighborhood.
Since then I've moved but haven't yet gotten another beagle( I picked
up a house dog after the beagle and am awaiting his demise so I
can justify to the wife getting a pair of beagles to breed. Then
I'll have 8 or 10.... Well if I do get some more hunters I'll get
a hold of you and invite you out to listen to the music.
happy hunting
|
9.2 | Bunnies, the hard way... | DISCVR::FERRARO | | Tue Dec 19 1989 22:39 | 14 |
| Time to raise an old note...
Has anybody done any rabbit hunting without dogs?
Can it be sucessful.... I guess that is the big question.
I live in southern NH and have seen a few here and there
and was wondering if it would be worth my while sitting on
a stump waiting to catch the makings of bunnie stew.
Also, if anybody in the area is going bunnie hunting would they
mind a tag-a-long.
Greg
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9.3 | Don't need a dog | SKIVT::WENER | | Wed Dec 20 1989 06:24 | 18 |
|
Greg,
Are you hunting cottontails or Snowshoe? I used to stillhunt
for both types a while back with a .22 and was fairly successful.
Cottontails prefer thick edges of fields and old stonewalls, rail-
road track banks, and basically anyplace there's lots of thick
brush. Snowshoe's like thick conifer forests and are usually found
in more deeper woods.
Still hunt for them early in the morning and just before dark,
both are nocturnal and can be found feeding at these times. Snowshoes
are tough to pick out but that makes them extra challenging. A .22
also helps keep you in practice for when you'll be deer hunting. Also,
forgot to mention, just prior to and following a snowfall are really
good times to be out. If there's a fresh snow, you can track snowshoes
because they don't hole up like cottontails. Have Fun!
- Rob
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9.4 | Can you get Georgia Sportman there? | CSCOA3::HUFFSTETLER | Reckless Abandoner | Wed Dec 20 1989 10:07 | 21 |
| Greg,
An old issue of Georgia Sportsman had an article on this. They
talked about how the hunter needed to literally kick the
brushpiles to jump the rabbits, but we're talking exclusively
cottontails (there aren't a lot of snoeshoes in Georgia ;^)).
Some of the other facts I remember were that the writer assumed
you would be hunting with a shotgun, how to pick likely
brushpiles - one with good exposure to sun since the rabbit's fur
isn't really a good insulator, hunt "edge" cover where a field
butts up against a wooded lot or where a ditch runs thru a field,
when you jump one it usually runs off only a short distance and
will circle back to you, etc.
I'll look for the copy if I still have it and get you a copy of
it. You might try looking in the microfiche of your local public
library. A lot of the hunting articles are pretty generic
because I've seen the same articles that are in G.S. in Tennessee
Sportsman, etc.
Scott
|
9.5 | No bark, just bite | DISCVR::FERRARO | | Wed Dec 20 1989 18:04 | 24 |
| Rob, Scott
Thanks for the replys, mostly will be looking for cottontails
but if a snowshoe is where it's not suppose to be, Oh well....
I know a few places that would fit the bill. There are several
miles of railroad bed that have been converted to snowmobile
trails, and at several places they run along fields and stone
walls.
-Rob
I planned on using a .22 If they are too quick for me I just
have to use the 12Ga with light loads.
-Scott
I'll take a look into some back issues of sporting magazines as
I come across them. In the meanwhile if you come up with anything
interesting send them along to Greg Ferraro APO-1/C3
Many thanks,
Greg
|
9.6 | Loads and Chokes? | MAIL::HENSON | | Thu Dec 21 1989 10:39 | 4 |
| I have a question for the shotgunners. What load/choke combinations
seem most effective on cottontails?
Jerry
|
9.7 | Bugs says: | BOSTON::HICKS | | Thu Dec 21 1989 16:14 | 2 |
| Improver Cylinder and Field "Express" Loads of #6 shot is usually
recommended for bunnies, but I speak not from experience.
|
9.8 | Modified might be better | SKIVT::WENER | | Fri Dec 22 1989 06:35 | 6 |
|
It depends on the cover, actually. If it's mixed field edges you
might want a modified for some 30-35 yarders. I agree, #6 is best.
- Rob
|
9.9 | | HAZEL::LEFEBVRE | Repossess a Yuppie | Fri Dec 22 1989 09:08 | 4 |
| I've had some success with snow-shoe hares in the Seacoast area
of NH. BTW, they are GREAT eatin'!
Mark.
|
9.10 | | SAC::PHILPOTT_I | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Wed Jan 03 1990 06:57 | 17 |
| Until a few years ago I used to regularly shoot rabbits (I had a share in a
holiday cottage - a condition in the ground lease from the farmer whose land
the cottage was on required us to predate 250 brace (ie 500 bunnies) a year
for him, since they competed with his sheep).
All was done with shotguns (for safety, and 'cause we couldn't get licences
for rifles on this land - this is England you know, not the land of Daniel
Boone), and no dogs (dogs and sheep don't mix).
Usually we either "rough shot" the field (walked over the land taking targets
of opportunity) or worked from a blind (usually a pile of straw bales) in the
early morning.
Personally I liked to use a 16 gauge with #6 shot (its an old hand made shotgun
of World War I vintage - they didn't have things like chokes back then)
/. Ian .\
|
9.11 | Any Luck this past season?? | EUCLID::PETERSON | Panama has no Second Amendment | Wed Jan 03 1990 09:28 | 8 |
|
Does anyone have a general area in Central/western Mass. that
was lucky for them as far as rabbit populations and landowner
co-operation?
CP
|
9.12 | Disappearing rabbits.... | DISCVR::FERRARO | | Wed Jan 03 1990 16:16 | 13 |
| Over the holidays I got a chance to get out looking for the little
creatures without any sucess. Don't worry, I'm going out again this
weekend....
I do have one question though... I came upon some cottontail tracks
and followed them for 30 or so yards and they just plain disappeared.
Any ideas where this creature may have gone...?
The area being hunted is a cut for powerlines so the ground cover was
minimal, just some scraggly bushes and a sapling here and there. Also,
it was snowing lightly so I'm sure the tracks were less than � hour old.
Greg
|
9.13 | Kick those brush piles. | WFOVX5::KEYWORTH | | Thu Jan 04 1990 07:57 | 12 |
| Sounds like a good time to start kicking bushes, brush piles or
just the snow, etc. right around where the tracks disappeared.
I hunt rabbits without a dog myself and haven't been anymore successful
than you. I used my son as a beagle last year and he did kick one
out one day but the rabbit ran off so that my son was between us.
I wonder if I could get my son to do this on his hands and
knees. :^) I'll be going out a few times myself this year. Does
anyone know where there might be a reasonable snowshoe rabbit
population in western (west of Quabbin reservior) Mass.?
Good luck on the rabbit hunting,
John
|
9.14 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Mail SPWACY::CHARBONND | Thu Jan 04 1990 10:08 | 7 |
| John I see by your nodename that you're in Westfield,Mass.
Have you tried the Knightville reservoir in Huntington ?
Follow rte 112 north from 20, about three miles.
Dana
PS Try around your local golf courses - rabbit havens :-)
|
9.15 | | EUCLID::PETERSON | Panama has no Second Amendment | Thu Jan 04 1990 11:11 | 10 |
|
I was following some tracks over the weekend that looked like bunny
tracks-until they disappeared at teh foot of a tree. After scouting
around for a while I picked up the trail again-and it looked like
squirrel tracks. When they run can their tracks resemble bunnies?
(These ones did!)
Chuck
|
9.16 | Hedge rows too | WFOVX5::KEYWORTH | | Thu Jan 04 1990 11:21 | 12 |
| Thanks Dana, good suggestions. I've got a few hedge rows and a
couple power lines to check out also. I've seen snow shoes in
upstate New York while deer hunting in an area that was so thick
with waist-high evergreens that you could hardly walk through it
in places. Also, a dangerous place to be if hunting alone. There
were little dips and fallen logs that you coudn't see. It'd be a
good place to break a leg. I haven't run across anything quite
like that here yet.
I'll let you know how I make out.
John
|
9.17 | Parasites ?
| BUSY::CARL_JOHNSON | | Fri Mar 26 1993 11:27 | 10 |
| I have never hunted rabbits before. I've eaten then and they are good not to
mention low in fat for those nutrition conscious folks. My question is this
when I mentioned I was planning to go out on to the club grounds in search of
bunnies one of the other members told me he would not eat rabbit before the
weather was cold. He said they tended to have parasites. Has anybody know
what parasites they tend to be infested with and if there is indead a better
season in which to hunt ?
Thanks
Carl
|
9.18 | old wives tale or truth?? | CHRLIE::HUSTON | | Fri Mar 26 1993 12:07 | 11 |
|
I was taught that rabbits can have some type of worm that gives them
Tulermia (sp?), and if you wait until it is cold out it kills this
off.
I was also told by another person not to worry about it, just check
the liver when you dress them out, if it has spots on it then they
have tulermia, if no spots, eat away (ok, cook it first).
--Bob
|
9.19 | | DTRACY::STORM | | Thu Apr 01 1993 16:18 | 5 |
| My understanding is you can catch that by handling the rabbit, not just
eating it.
Mark,
|
9.20 | | 2819::BOOTH | Stephen Booth | Tue Jan 24 1995 07:12 | 4 |
|
Anyone around the Lunenburg/Townsend area hunt for rabbits ?
-Steve-
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