T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1120.1 | a loner in the wild | USRCV1::GEIBELL | KING FISHING ON LAKE ONTARIO | Tue Dec 31 1991 15:43 | 46 |
|
Well I would have to say that the most memorable time in the stand
this year was on 12-25-91.
I left the house at 6 am drove to my favorite spot put up my stand
and settled back and waited for daylight, the woods were so quiet it
was almost spooky, no car noises, no planes flying overhead, and best
of all no sounds of strip mining equipment off in the distance, but
after all it was christmas morning.
at first light I could hear a deer walking about 100 yrds away, the
snow sounded like corn flakes (8 degrees) well at 7:20 I watched a
really nice doe meander by a mear 30 yrds away, never knowing a human
was in her territory.
then shortly afterwards I heard the oh so familiar sound of turkeys
flying off roost, and then 45 minutes later I had 23 turkeys all around
me and they didnt care what then funny looking thing hanging on the
tree was. there was one really decent gobbler (+ - 7" beard) but all
the rest were hens and jakes, but none the less to see such a majestic
bird in the wild is a thrill.
Being that I get to return to pa often I get to see turkeys quite
regularly, heck I can remember when 10-15 yrs ago the only turkeys were
in the northern mountains of Pa. then all of a sudden the population
took off and now they are everywhere. and even a neusence in some
places, as a matter of fact I know if my mom could of got her hands on
a shotgun there would of been some dead turkeys last summer, after
spending better than $300.00 for roses boardering the driveway and
rock garden, she came home one day to find 14 turkeys there and not one
single rose bush, seemed they really like to eat the young tender
plants.. she was furious, her temper is about as long as mine, and I
will have to say she can shoot better than I can. the turkeys never did
come back to her house.
Some people really dont understand why guys like to go out into
the woods and sit for hours on end, go to extreams to camo themselfs,
spend megabucks on equipment, just to hunt wildlife, and what really
gets me is when someone asked me on monday if I got another deer and
when I said no they said well you must be bummed out., I said well I
spent close to 35 hours in the woods over christmas, and ya know what
I didnt hear 1 D*MN telephone, 1 T.V. , or anyone hounding me to do
stuff. its so peacefull out in the woods. one nice long day in the
woods is the best relaxation a person can get.
Just being part of natures day is a success to me!
Lee
|
1120.2 | I had a bird once.... | CSC32::SCHIMPF | | Tue Dec 31 1991 17:18 | 9 |
| While I was deer hunting one time; I had stopped to eat a sandwich and
just enjoy the surroundings. After about the third bite I had three or
four "gray" Jays watching me REAL INTENSE like. Reminded me of my Lab.
Drooling, all bugged eyed. Anyway after throwing small bits of bread
around, I had one actually land on my stomach and take small pieces
out of my hand. I didn't harvest a deer that year, but that "wild"
bird eating out of my hand was worth every bit of time and money spent.
Jeff
|
1120.3 | -1 Canada Jays | HYEND::POPIENIUCK | | Thu Jan 02 1992 08:09 | 23 |
| Re: -1
Those gray jays are called Canada Jays. They are closely related to
Blue Jays, but are at the opposite end of the scale in terms of
disposition. Instead of squawking at you forever, they will freqently
eat out of your hand with just a little encouragement.
Reminds me of another encounter this year while in the woods of Maine.
I'm used to flushing grouse (partridge) and getting my wits scared out,
but I'd never seen a Spruce Grouse until this year. It's easy to see
why they are a protected species. They are nearly identical to Ruffd
Grouse in terms of size, but are darker and have a bit of red. These
spruce grouse are the dumbest birds. I nearly stepped on one and all
it did was fly straight up about 8 feet and landed on a limb. Then it
just stayed there. Easy to see why they are now protected. They need
it.
Also, while my brother and I were putting up a couple tree stands, a
good sized bull moose came walking down the path we were near. Even
with all the noise of two guys breaking off limbs, hauling these
home-built stands into the trees, loud talking, etc.; this bull moose
just stood about 75 yards away watching us. He was still there when we
left.
|
1120.4 | Great topic | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | Just a word in Mr Churchill's ear | Thu Jan 02 1992 08:40 | 16 |
| I, too, have had Canadian Jays feed out of my hand. In Maine, they
come out of the woodwork when you field dress your deer.
During my second year of deer hunting in Maine, I was crouched over on
my hands and knees checking out some deer sign when I hear a rustling
underneath a canopy that was formed by frozen snow and sagging pine
boughs. Looking over my left shoulder towards the commotion (about 7
feet away), I froze as a very large and very sleepy black bear stood on
its hind legs, snorted and ran away. Yes, boys and girls, 7 feet.
By the time I realized I had a bear tag attached to my deer tag, that
bad boy was in the next county.
Needless to say, my soiled shorts are still under that pine bough.
Mark.
|
1120.5 | | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | Ultralight forever | Thu Jan 02 1992 09:17 | 21 |
| This has got to be one of the best notes in hunting this year. Just
reading all the other notes brings back all the memories of the hunting
season which just ended yesterday. When I walked out of the woods for
the last time of the season, I actually shed a tear. Not because I did
not harvest a deer, but because the woods is like home away from home.
I saw so much wildlife this year, and the one incident that stands out
the most was during bow season.
I was sitting on my stand on a cool early October morning and the sun
was just beginning to show its rays through the tops of the pine trees,
when I had heard a sound of something walking on the ground below me.
It was a red fox. It came within 5 ft of my stand and didn't see me.
I had also seen plenty of fox squirrels this year. What I like most
about hunting, is getting in the animals environment and observing them
without being detected. Nature in the wild. I really want to get a
video camera and tape some of this that I am experiencing, so I can
share it with my wife. There is ALOT more to hunting than squeezing a
trigger or releasing an arrow.
Bob
|
1120.6 | | ZEKE::HOLLEN | | Thu Jan 02 1992 12:22 | 29 |
|
Yeah, I had the Canadian Jays eating out of my hand up in Errol NH
this year. I love the way they fly through the woods. They just seem to
swoop from branch to branch. I was feeding it bits of my sandwich by
holding the piece between my thumb and forefinger and "making" him
land on my palm and digging between my fingers for it. They are one
neat bird :-)
About 9 years ago (in Errol) I had what I now believe was a Canadian
Lynx walk by me about 20 yards away. That was really something! My
first sighting of a "wild cat" ever! I was on a hillside that my buddy
had taken a bear on about a week before. It was cold, and I was just
sitting against this tree with my collar up when I saw movement direct-
ly in front of me. At first I though it was a pregnant dog or something
because it looked just too "stocky" to be anything else. To get a
better look at whatever this was I raised my rifle to see it through
the scope (yeah, I know it's not suppose to be done, but this was
definitly "spur of the moment!). It was moving right to left, then it
made a slight turn toward me. I got a REAL good look at the cats face
as it walked by me to the left. It was sorta "panting", and I could see
the very prominent mustache and the hair tufts at the tips of the ears.
It was completely brown too, not that mottled look like a Bobcat has...
That was one of the most interesting things I've ever seen in the
woods! I like to think of stuff like this as "added bonuses" to your
hunting experiences...
I know this was suppose to be about 1991, but I couldn't resist :-)
Joe
|
1120.7 | | MCIS5::PAPPALARDO | A Pure Hunter | Thu Jan 02 1992 13:01 | 30 |
|
Oct, 26, 91 in N.H., It was the opener of the Muzzle-Loader season. I
decided to still hunt in the a.m. and make a large circle around my
stand to see how things were since I hadn't been there in a week.
As I was completing my circle and approaching my stand I jumped a deer
which ran by my stand.(@#%$&^)...At 8:30am of which I've been on stand
now for about an hour, I was leaning against the tree looking lets say
north for the purpose of this note and heard something directly behind
me. As I turned my head there's this spike looking(laughing) at me.
Two quick jumps and he's gone.(#$@^%$)
At 1:30pm a shot fired about 200yds away, two deer come running to me
one to my left and one to my right about 60yds and they blow by.....
(@#$%$%%^).
At 4:30 to my left 2 skippers come prancing down the hill about 45yds
off, they go by...bye-bye(@@@$%#@#) I'm up to 6 deer now and remaining
calm as I could...darkness comes, I go to the truck and scream!
Next morning....9am, I'm on same stand.....Big-doe walking by 12yds...I
fire...muzzle-loader doesn't go off.(#@#$%#@)...
I wrap gun around tree,take home, melt down and make a lamp out of it.
I didn't, but that was on my mind.
Rick
|
1120.8 | here's a few | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Thu Jan 02 1992 13:05 | 50 |
| There's much more to the hunting experience than simply pulling the
trigger and harvesting an animal...
some of the things i've had the pleasure of seeing and hearing while on
stand:
Had an Owl fly by my head as I reached the ground after climbing down
from my treestand at dusk.
Had a Redtailed Hawk light on a branch in front of my treestand not more
than 5' from me, had the pleasure of watching it as it intently
surveyed the red squirrels scurring arond on the ground below... Was
treated to a view few people will ever see in the wild, when it
unfolded it's wings, glided off the branch to swoop down and handily
snatch up a screaming red squirrel (although not for long) and fly
effortlessly away with his supper.
Had several chickadees light on my hat, shoulders, gun barrel, and
actually had one flip upside down on the brim of my camo hat after
walking around on my head for a few seconds...
Saw racoons, turkeys, fishers, porqupines, coyotes...
Had a red fox wander around under my tree, with his nose to the ground
probably wondering who the "new" fox was in his area who had urinated
under the tree (had squirted Tinks red fox P under my stand from above)
wasn't sure at the time if they were in season (mass bow)
Seeing good friends fill licenses, hoping for others to bag their
first, listening with excitement when they tell of deer that they saw.
The terror of almost stepping on a Thunder Chicken one night when
coming out of the woods alone at dark... (roosted under a laurel bush)
Many of you have experienced the excitement of almost stepping on one
in the daylight, picture yourself doing it in the dark at night...
Tracking a buck on saturday during the Mass shotgun season, (many of
you know what the conditions were like) light dusting of snow on top of
sheer ice... and "watching" the track of this deer as it fell down on
the side of a hill and slid down 30-40 yards off of a 6' wall and into
someones backyard. (if anyone was ever wondering how deer travel on
crusty/icey snow... now you know, they fall down just like we do)
There's many more experiences, but these are just a few that quickly
came to mind.
Being in the woods to enjoy good times with good friends is the real
reason, pulling the trigger is just frosting on the cake.
Fra
|
1120.9 | birds and squirrells always show intrest to hunters | USRCV2::GEIBELL | KING FISHING ON LAKE ONTARIO | Thu Jan 02 1992 13:46 | 36 |
|
As bob stated this note is great, the meories of unsuccessfull days
afield. several others come to mind for me.
during my bowhunting experiences this year amongst the pain of torn
muscles in my shoulder I was put in a position that I had to put the
lower wheel of the bow on the stand and hold the top wheel with my left
hand and on evening a chickadee decided that the arrow made a really
nice perch. well after setting there for a couple minutes it walked on
out the arrow till it got to the broadhead and intent on haveing that
shiny stainless for supper it tugged and pulled and tugged until he
pulled so hard the arrow came off the rest.
Another experience happend during the archery season also as I stood
in a nice pine waiting for a deer I heard a noise that came from my
left but I didnt know where, as I am looking off to my left I become
eye to eye with a big grey squirrell about 6 inches from my face, it
just hung on the tree and looked at me, then when it was satisfied that
I wasnt going to harm it he ran up the tree and finished cutting the
acorn he had stashed in his mouth.
Yet another encounter with a grey squirrell happened during gun
season here in NY, thanksgiving day as I sat on the ground watching a
ridge I heard something coming towards me, when the squirrell finally
came into view I noticed he was carrying an apple about the size of a
softball, well when the squirrell got to my feet he stopped looked at
me and dropped the apple and ran about 20 feet stopped turned around
ran back grabbed the apple and took off with it again, I was wondering
what was going through that squirrell's mind at that time. by the way
I was wearing safety orange at the time, but he still managed to come
that close to me.
Lee
|
1120.10 | One I'll never forget. | UPSENG::PHELPS | | Thu Jan 02 1992 13:47 | 20 |
|
On Dec. 1, while duck hunting out of my blind on an island on Lake
Champlain in Vermont, I spotted a large bird soaring over the mountains
on the New York side of the Lake. Generally I see quite a few turkey
vultures where I hunt, but this bird seemed to fly differently. I
picked up my binoculars and looked and saw a beautiful adult male Bald
Eagle in full plumage. I watched him for a good half hour working his
way back to the Vermont side of the lake.
I called Vt. Fish and wildlife office when I got back and talked
with them for 10 or 15 minutes and which they confirmed that there was
a nesting pair in the area where I hunt and they thanked me for
reporting it in. I told them I would not reveal the location as I
didn't want someone to try to disturb them. Up to that point, I had no
idea we had bald eagles in Vermont.
And my wife wonders why I get up so early in the morning to go out
and sit in the cold....?!
John
|
1120.11 | Gotta love it! | ESKIMO::RINELLA | | Thu Jan 02 1992 14:13 | 36 |
|
I had a few exciting moments like when I was in Pa. trying a new area,
while walking toward an old abandon orchard in the wee morning hours a
snort and a flag goes off 20 yards in front of me..I sit down behind a
rock wall and at 9:00 am something comes running in behind the wall and
blows, I raise my head slowly and am face to face with a four pointer,
the deer turns and walks away from me without a chance for a good
shot.arghhh
As I try to grunt it back to me, to my right another four pointer comes
walking in. Its about 30 yards away from me and would keep stoping and
checking the air. Everytime it would stop there would be trees and what
not in front of the vitals, after holding the bow to the point of giving
up from cramping of the muscles it finally gave me a broad side shot at
15 yards with it's head behind a tree, I draw back and put the pin on
the dime and in slow motion, like the tape October White Tail Hunting
for those of you that have seen it, the deer dropped a full body
width and the arrow flew harmlessly over it's back.Arghhhhh.
I retrive the arrow and no sooner do I walk back to were I was sitting,
I'm checking the arrow and 6 deer come running up and jumpimg over the
stone wall about 25 yards from me.. triple arrrrggghhhhh...All this in
a 25 minute span. The next day I sat there all day seeing neither hide
nor hair of these creatures.
Last but not least was having that ten pointer walk ten yards in front
of me while I'm sitting in front of a boulder, I was able to draw on it
without it ever knowing I was there. Unfortunately, by the time I drew
on it it had moved to my right were alot of branches would have
interfered with my shot possiblly paunching it. I have never seen a
deer that big and that alone really made my season one that will be
with me for many years to come.
Nothing can ever match the enjoyment of being out in the wilderness and
being one with nature.
|
1120.12 | a good year... | BTOVT::MORONG | | Thu Jan 02 1992 14:19 | 24 |
| The note about the bird flushed out in the dark reminded me
of something that happened this year to me. I finally talked
my wife into going out with me to my evening stand during bow
season. We didn't see any deer, but did see lots of other wild-
life. Even had a partridge land about 10 yds from us. She thought
that was great, and I was hoping that maybe this experience would
get her interested in going out hunting with me more often. But,
on the way out of the woods that evening (after dark) we prac-
tically stepped on a partridge before it took off. Just about
scared my wife to death!!! I almost fell down laughing.... ;-)
However, she really didn't like being out in the woods after
dark, and that bird certainly didn't help. Might be quite a
while before I get her out ther again.....
Next year I will be taking my son out bow hunting for the first
time. He will be 8 yrs old, and he's been bugging me for quite a
while. I promised him that I would take him next year. I think he
will be old enough to be quite in the woods. Time to start teaching
him the basics of hunting. In a few years I will have him as a
hunting partner, then it will be 3 generations hunting together (my
Dad hunts with me all the time). That will be real nice....
-Ron-
|
1120.13 | if the fish ain't bitin' - pick berries | SA1794::CHARBONND | Only Nixon can go to China. | Thu Jan 02 1992 14:38 | 3 |
| I consider any year I learn something a good year. This year I
learned I should be more flexible about where and when I hunt.
So, it was a good year ;-)
|
1120.14 | Being Rejuvenated | OASS::SOBCZYNSKI_L | | Thu Jan 02 1992 14:53 | 11 |
|
Each morning I'm able to get out in the woods is an experience of new.
There is always the usual, but then there is the new, and having seen
or heard it once doesn't make it old. Listening to the lizards walking
the leaves, turtule burying itself, even seeing different bugs. Fox
blue & red, its like be rejuvenated each time I get into the woods.
There is always something new, depending on my state of awareness.
About the only thing that will change is, next season when the weather
report is for cold, whether it feels cold or not before going out in
the AM, I will dress for cold weather.
|
1120.15 | a great note... | BTOVT::REMILLARD_K | | Thu Jan 02 1992 15:26 | 60 |
|
Sitting on the edge of cedar thicket overlooking a deer run when I
hear, tick..tick..tick...tick coming through the cedar's, it's a pair
of grouse cruising through the cedars (thick stuff), kind of like a
couple of F-14's in a dog fight. Well the female decides to land and
sit right next to me...I'm talking 6" away!!! and the male starts
displaying for her right in front of me, dragging his wing tips, all
puffed up, I slowly rolled my eyes down and to the left to see this
bird staring up at me...she didn't spook but just walked off wondering
what to heck I was...
Never knew how smart raccoon's were until I had one track me up a tree.
2 coons were coming into the orchard I was watching pretty regularly
and the largest one was always very careful. This coon sniffed me out,
to the point of tracking my steps exactly, and then sniffing (you could
hear it draw the air into its nose) and climb the tree I was in to a
few feet below my feet. What a thrill to watch them climb apple trees
and shake apples out, and to have on land square on top of the coon on
the ground...just too funny.
Have a deer walk through an orchard pushing a couple of grouse along,
no more than a few feet in front of the little bucks hooves. This
surprised me because I thought the grouse would have flushed from the
sounds of the deer coming through the brush...but not these birds, they
really know their predators well.
As Fra, I had a Great Horned Owl land in the hemlock next to me to
swoop on a unsuspecting chipmunk...quite a russel in the leaves.
After missing a shot on a 4 pointer with my bow, have the deer swing
around and trot towards me, to stop a few feet away bobbing its head
like crazy to see what I was...I was too much in awe of what was
happening to shoot again, and it wouldn't have been a good shot anyway.
While bird hunting through some mixed hard/soft woods take a gray
squirrel on the run, only to see it scurry away...thining I lost it.
When all of the sudden I feel a wet nose on the back of my leg...and
there's my lab with a dead squirrel in her mouth!!!
To see a mother doe scold her young fawns because they're distracting
her from watching me in a treestand. The mother doe spotted me almost
instantly as she came into sight, and proceeded to stomp and bob her
head etc. But as her little ones would get close to her, rub their
noses into her neck, etc., she would snap her head at them as if to
say, "Don't bother me you fools, look in that tree, and tell me if that
looks normal!!!." It was interesting to watch, if even at the time it
bothered me because she was so darn perceptive...I didn't get a shot.
I find that the times I view nature simply as an observer are far more
frequent than as a predator. I certainly don't take pleasure in seeing
animals die, but knowing what the balance of nature really is, and
accepting death as part of that balance, it makes it possible for me to
participate in that balance.
It's my own personal feeling that with more notes like this, and more
people understanding that killing the animal is not paramount to being
a "successful" hunter, these hunter misidentification tragedy's could
be eliminated.
Kevin
|
1120.16 | A good hunting partner. | LEDS::VESESKIS | | Fri Jan 03 1992 09:10 | 15 |
|
For the past 5 years my friend and I have always spent 2-3 days of
camping out during grouse season. We love the fast pace challenge of trying
to knock these miniature SCUD missles out of the sky. Usually in the afternoons
we spend an hour or two fishing for a couple of brookies for the evening meal
cooked over the campfire. Soon my friend will be moving back to his native
Penn. and these special moments we had hunting, fishing and camping will be
over. He has hunted and fished since he was in diapers and he passed a lot
of that knowledge to me - it is something I am truly grateful for him in doing.
When we sat around the campfire in the evening the conversation usually
drifted away from work and quickly into hunting, shooting, fishing, tracking,
etc. Slowly the world started to grow smaller and smaller until its size was
about the radius of light from the campfire with the additional warmth of his
friendship.
|
1120.17 | A Hunting Partner in the Making. | CSC32::P_HIROSS | | Fri Jan 03 1992 10:53 | 23 |
| The greatest pleasure I had this season was a pheasant hunt with my in-laws
on a Wisconsin farm. A week before we left for our trip I bought my 3 year
old son (turned 4 in Dec.) a Daisy pop gun and a woodland camo outfit.
I enjoyed teaching my son the basic of gun safety ie don't shoot Daddy.
After a successful morning hunt on the way back to our camper we
propped up one of the pheasants with sticks near the side of the road.
My brother(s) in-law and I then took my son (who had just arrived) and
started to walk down the gravel road. We had our shotguns and he had his
pop gun. We were dressed in woodland camo. It was a real enjoyment for us
seeing how excited the little guy was. For every step we took he took two.
We finally came across the propped up pheasant. We all encouraged him and
the little guy dropped on all fours and belly-walked up to the pheasant and
started to fire away. The little guy ran up and grabbed the pheasant. He
could barely lift the bird but with a face of a determined Olympic weight
lifter he managed to curle the bird and ran towards us. His face was all
grins (ear-to-ear).
Another pleasure was watching him help clean the bird. You clean what you
shoot! Needless to say, I'll have a hunting partner in the years to come.
Pete
|
1120.18 | $.02 | DENVER::WITCHEY | | Fri Jan 03 1992 19:04 | 23 |
| Watching two forkhorns lock antlers to establish dominance, but
they weren't very good at it. One got his fanny slammed into the
trunk of a quakie. Comic relief for the evening hunt.
Having a doe face me in thick woods and not bolt when, out loud,
I said, "Mornin' ma'am." She seemed to know I wasn't going to
hurt her.
Stepping around the back of the truck as a doe stepped around the
front of it. 'bout got religion on that one.
Having a five point elk in my cross-hairs at 250 yards and not
daring to pull the trigger.
Finding out that when my hunting partner sees a five point elk
in the flesh, he loses the power of coherent speech.
Following my tracks back to the truck and finding droppings in
my bootprint.
But mostly the breeze in my face, the stillness of the forest and
the feeling that I'm alone in a place I love and have very mixed
feelings about sharing.
|
1120.19 | watching things come together | ASDG::DUFFY | | Sat Jan 04 1992 13:15 | 126 |
| This past season was my best hunting season ever..in success and in
enjoyment.
It started a year ago December when I came home from work to find
my new hunting partner Kelsey (yellow lab) sitting on my bed.
Watching my new partner grow,(and myself since I never had a hunting
dog before)from her first sock retrieve, to a dummie retrieve, to sniffing
out the pheasent wing underneath the throw rug in the livingroom at 4 mths.
Taking her out and introducing her to nature, "having troubles getting over
that stone wall girl" I would say to her, now I watch her bound over them
in one shot.
Getting through the period when she wouldn't retieve a thing,all she
wanted to do was play "I don't want to chase that thing and why are you
blowing that wistle so much, whats your problem I'm having fun" she
would tell with that big tongue.
Its the summer now and she is a retieving fool now. Sitting in a park
with my lady and my new born daughter Breanna, when I see a paper bag
blowing in the wind across the field about 70 yds out I put her on
mark and she rambles out to it and brings it back to me.
Later in the summer,getting closer to the start of the hunting season
now. I have her triple retrieving through my decoys in my favorite swamp.
Having her off playing and throwing the dummie out as far as I can and
behind stuff, then sending her on a blind retrieve and having it
delivered to my hand.
Whats so hard about this training a hunting dog bit anyway,I would
say to myself and the hunting god would reply "just wait and see".
Grouse season opens no luck but didn't expect to have any,waiting
for ducks and pheasents to open.
Opening day of pheasent I'm at my club at dawn when we go into the
woods...what a nightmare. We go out into the woods and Kelsey doesn't
care about hunting, she had to say hello to every hunter and their dog
she could see, not to mention she thought every wistle she heard was
for her.( I had a problem with other hunters sending their dogs in
where I was). After I sat and calmed her down and let the other hunters
go on their way,we started again. I was hunting with my buddies father,
he's 78yrs old so we have him path hunt. We are working a field next to a
pond when I see a nice cock pheasent on the ground. I turn to my
buddies dad and tell him whats going on. I work my dog over to it and I
watch my dog get her first flush, and right at Malcom, only to find
some SOB heard me tell Malcom one was on the ground and he got
in-between us for the shot, and he missed. Upset but happy I left to
have breakfast. Later that day she got many more flushes but I only
got 1, she retrieved it to hand.
Then the nightmare duck hunts. All season long I was setting up in the
wrong part of the swamp. Watching other people get their ducks.Then 1
day I see a hunter knock down a duck and standing by his blind looking
out over the water, I thought the duck must be out of his wader range
this could be a good chance for her first water retrieve. I get to him
and he says its off over there somewhere. I put her on mark and send
her,she swims 20 ft off shore and stops and doesn't go any deeper. She
doesn't believe me there is something out there. Where did my trained
dog go?? Then I would hear the hunting god say "thought it was easy
didn't you". My dog and I had this debate at waters edge for about 15
min. when a hen mallard flys with-in 20 yrds of us, I knock it down
and tell her to GETIT and she swims over and brings to my hand. I have
learned a lesson today, she doesn't have the confidence in me yet,we'll
work on that on the off season. At least she did have her first water
retrieve.
How proud I was when she had her first 2 bird day (in fact she got
3 that day 2 pheasent and a grouse).I have her off to my left in some
heavy cover when I hear noises in dry leaves to my right, I scope out
a cock 15 yards from me. I watch my dog get closer to it and her
excitement raise.She is following in the birds steps when she get to
about 10 feet from it she stops and looks at it then me, I tell calmly
thats what we here for and to get it she goes after it like a shot,
bird goes up.....bird goes down...she brings it to my hand. Good job
Kesley 1 bird in 5 min. Now we are at the other end of the cover when
she starts picking up speed again and up goes bird...down comes bird
only to land in a tree squawking at my dog and I. I walk over to it
it goes to fly again but it has a broken wing..the chase is on..
I watched with tears in my eyes because I was laughing so hard, as I
watched my first year dog chase this bird and have it jump over her
and head in another direction, seeing my puppy get POed at the bird and
finally to burry it, brings it back to hand with the good wing hitting
her upside the head. Great job Kelsey 2 birds 10 min. lets go eat
lunch. After lunch we head into a new area, she is working hard now
she has birds on her mind and in her nose. She's working in heavy
cover when a grouse comes crashing out and up over some trees then
BOOM,BOOM down comes bird (good shooting Duff 3 bird 4 shots)falls
behind some really thick thickets and over a mound and into a gully.
Kelesy comes out of the cover she was in,looking at me saying "where is
it". I sent her into the junk,she worked her way though the thickets and
over the mound and out of sight. A minute later she comes back over the
mound with bird in her mouth. Best retrieve all year...
Watching the both of us grow as hunters is something I'll never
forget (except maybe the bad shots). Sitting in the woods at the end
the day (with or with out birds) having a good feeling knowing I was
spending time with a good friend.
This off season we will both have some work to do, me in reading
her better and her growing out of being a puppy (but do I want that I
don't know).
What did you say hunting god "it only gets better". IF so we have
alot of enjoyment ahead of us.
Duff
Just walking in the woods with my new friend and seeing the both
of us grow through the season was something I'll never forget (except
my bad shots).
Whats so hard about this training a hunting dog stuff anyway
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1120.20 | 7 year old's first time out | UNXA::SCODA | | Mon Jan 06 1992 12:32 | 25 |
| The last time out for small game, my son Danny (age 7 carrying
binoculars), my brother Tom and I had an interesting time. We took
lawn chairs and a thermos of hot chocolate and sat out on the top of
a hill that Tom owns (about 6 or 7 acres) just waiting for squirrels.
Danny got bored so we walked over to a ladder stand about 40 yards
away. Danny was climbing down from the stand and asked "Daddy, what's
that on the ground, is it an own?". Sure enough, not 3 feet from the
base of the stand, there was a small owl (about 8 or 10 inches high)
asleep on the ground. With the three of us gawking at it, it must have
taken about 30 or 45 seconds for the little critter to wake up and
calmly fly to a tree about 40 feet from where we were.
Later, walking around the top of the mountain, Tom pointed out a group
of 4 doe - which Danny spotted again later in the afternoon from
onother one of our brother's "front" yard.
To top things off, Danny spotted a young chestnut tree (maybe 8" in
diameter and 30 or so feet tall); Tom had seen chestnut hulls, and has
been looking for the trees on that mountain for 7 or 8 years.
Danny had a great time; petty sure we got a future hunter here.
Dave Scoda
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