T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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330.1 | Here's mine | CLUSTA::STORM | | Thu Jan 05 1989 13:39 | 22 |
|
My Lab and I had a lot of good times this season, but the best single
moment was the 3 geese we took the week before Christmas. It wasn't
so much that we got the geese, but the picture in my mind of how
they came in.
We were mostly duck hunting out of my boat. Tide was about 3 feet
below high, which meant a spit of land separating us from the bay
was about 3 feet above water level. We had planned to leave at
11:00 to get back to work, but couldn't drag ourselves away.
At 11:30 my partner said he saw geese coming our way. I couldn't
see them until they crossed over the spit of land. They were
flying so low that they had to gain altitude to get over the spit
of land. There were approximately 8 of them flying abreast at full
speed, almost directly at us, and they couldn't have been more than
5 feet above the water. WHAT A SIGHT!!! It looked like a B52 coming
in for a landing! My heart jumped into my throat when I first saw
them and everything else happened so fast it was a blurr. Afterwards,
we weren't sure who had shot which geese, but we sure were happy.
Mark,
|
330.2 | 3 men and a dog | VLNVAX::DMICHAELSON | | Thu Jan 05 1989 16:11 | 15 |
| We were hunting pheasent at a game reserve, the field was full of
hunters. We stoped and let them all pass their various ways, zig
zaging all over the place. Anyway the field clears, we start across
and the dog (a good dog) picks up a scent, oh its just a field mouse
or something. Com'on dog, lets go. She wont leave, "she's on something"
she pounces on a big clump of grass, up goes a big cock pheasent
right where 6 - 8 hunters, 3 dogs have just been. The closest in
our ranks fires two shots, the second fires two shots, all misses.
By now all the guys who just went thru the field are all looking.
The third and last hunter in our group, and the farthest away, and
the owner of the dog fires one shot and brings him down cold.
We planned it that way! :^)
Don
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330.3 | | HAZEL::LEFEBVRE | Advanced Test Technology, 289-1333 | Fri Jan 06 1989 08:57 | 38 |
| I consider the fact that I met a neighbor of mine who is a very
conscientious and highly ethical sportsman to be the highlight of
my hunting season.
Roy has a very well-trained Golden Retriever who literally dove
off a railroad trestle from 12 feet to retrieve a mallard in October.
He's also responsible for my taking up archery.
Although I didn't bag a deer this year, I did manage to hunt a new
area in Durham that is pretty much left alone by other hunters.
Roy and I received permission to hunt on private land, and although
I did manage to see 13 deer this season, I was only presented with
1 quality shot...and a small oak tree jumped in the way :^).
That oak tree looks mighty fine - mounted over my fireplace.
The most frustrating (humorous) event of the year occurred on opening
day of firearms season. About 11:30 that morning, I missed a huge
doe (see above tree kill). Anyway, while tracking the doe (to make
sure if I made a clean miss, which I did, after discovering the
wounded tree), I manage to push a couple of other deer, but didn't
shoot as they were running. Total for the day so far...3 deer.
After legal shooting ended, I jumped in the truck to head home.
I hadn't even shifted into 3rd gear when I slam on my brakes to
avoid hitting a nice buck with a huge rack standing in the road!
So here I am, sitting with my truck in neutral, gun in the rack,
2 cars behind me, and a massive buck standing in front of me staring
into my headlights. I couldn't believe it.
To make matters worse (as if possible), 2 does cross the road behind
the buck. Total deer for the day: 6.
Believe it or not, I laughed my butt off all the way home.
What a great sport!!
Mark.
|
330.4 | The Best of '88 | ATEAM::AYOTTE | | Sun Jan 08 1989 19:14 | 15 |
| Helped FRA drag his first of two bow-killed deer (VT)
Helped a friend drag his first muzzleloader deer (7pt/148#) after
going dry for 7 years. Took a 5 pointer with the rifle in NH.
My 1988 logbook summary:
TOTAL/PARTIAL DAYS HUNTED = 42
DEER SIGHTED = 58
LARGE DEER (175+#) = 5
BOW SHOTS = 0
MUZZLELOADER SHOTS = 3
RIFLE SHOTS = 1
But as always the best moments are those spent with friends sharing
memories of past hunts (and past hunters as well).
|
330.5 | FREINDLY PEOPLE IN MAINE | BTO::MOULTROUP | | Mon Jan 09 1989 08:05 | 28 |
| The best momemt of my 88 season was after i had shot my buck
in Maine. Ihad shot him on the back side of the mountain from my
car and dragged him down the back side of the mountain because it
was a lot shorter distance to a road. At the bottom of the mountain
i had to strip to the waist to cross a stream that was about crouth
deep. On the other side of the stream it was almost 90 degrees uphill
for about 300 yards to the road. There was no way i could drag that
225 pound deer up that hill by my self. So i left the deer beside
the stream and went up to the road. The first car that went by stoped
but was an older man that wasn't plysically able to help, but he
offered to go to look for some help at a local hunting camp down
the road aways. While he was gone two CONN. hunters from that camp
stopped and offered to help. It took the three of us about half
an hour to get the deer up to the road and they wouldn't accept
anything but thanks from me for their help. Just as we were dragging
the deer into the road an older hunter from maine stopped and offered
to drive me and the deer around the mountain to my car. I shot the
deer around 10:30 and got back to the bed & breakfast were i was
staying about 4:00 that afternoon. To top this off when i was checking
out of the bed & breakfast the next morning i had to remind the
lady i was staying with that i owed her for my stay. She said that
we had been having such a good time that she forgot that i was a
paying client. All the people icame into contact with in Andover,
Maine were wonderful people and i hope that all the people i meet
on any future hunts anywhere are as nice as the people in Maine.
BRUCE
|
330.6 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Thu Jan 12 1989 14:57 | 8 |
| Best moment - shaking my buddy's hand after he shot his first
buck.
Hon. mention - watching a big rack on opening morning of the
Mass. bow season, scraping about 60 yards out. Ran out of
vacation time, didn't see him again, next year......
Dana
|
330.7 | A day by Scarborough Marsh | DNEAST::SCHNEIDER_JA | | Sat Feb 11 1989 01:15 | 54 |
|
Beth (2 year-old GSP) and I were down at the bottom of the hill
getting rid of the TWO YEAR OLD Squirmies. You know- that wild energy
that comes out of every canine blood cell after the bell-collar goes on.
I had loaded up the Twenty guage semi-auto with three #6s and
was trying to avoid the alders and wetland sink-holes and not paying
much attention to the dog. I start out in alders to slow her down
and work closer before heading up into the hardwoods for a hoped
for grouse. Where is that Damn dog ?
I walked the required thirty yards or so to the edge of the
hardwoods and there about 15 feet from me she stood locked up
and pointing at a dead-fall birch. The tree, which formed a V shape
was leaning against an oak about three feet off the ground at the
point where it made contact. Beyond the oak a foot or so was another
dead-fall oak, I just could not see anything to draw her on point.
Maybe a squirrel or a snow-shoe hare is what I expected.
I was positioned almost directly behind her, so gun tight to
my shoulder I took a few steps to the right and up along side of
her and said "Whoa!" and Whoosh! Wirr! TWO Grouse shot up from under
the birch and flew off at a two oclock direction from me. I nailed
the first one before it got ten yards, the second one veared just
as I fired #2 but the third round crumpled him too. I'll admit to
at that point of going into shock. I then thought of the dog and
wondered why she hadn't broken point. Beth has only held point after
shot 4-5 times in her breif career, which was the reason for the
loud WHOA!
Well almost instinctively, I had reached in my Coat pocket for
a for 3 more rounds and had loaded one in the open breech of the
Smith & Wesson and, as I turned to look at Beth, I closed the chamber
on the shell. Whoosh! From about six feet in front of Beth and right
under the birch log came Papa Grouse flying directly away from me.
Up came the twenty. Boom! Phoof! And now Beth takes off.
She brought the last bird to me and I had to show her one of the two
others. What can you expect of a energetic young dog?
I have seen families of grouse together before, but usually in
the summer months. By hunting season they are usually singles.
One factor may be, that I am the only person who hunts the area.
I have thought alot about the situation and a whole bunch of luck
was involved. Both Beth and I came up on the birds suddenly. No
crunch! crunch! crunch! as we walked out of really marshy cover.
She pinned the nearest bird under the birch dead-fall.
I just walked the right direction and flushed the first two
with my whoa. They probably had not seen either of us because of
the fallen oak and birch logs. I don't think Beth was aware
that there was more than the one bird, but lots of scent from
three put her hard on point.
I am convinced that this or similar situations can't happen again.
I lose my Buck right along with the rest of the lottery players.
Good hunting! Jack
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