T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1241.1 | still waiting for horns | OFSITE::OKEEFE | | Mon Jan 11 1993 16:20 | 12 |
| Wish I could hunt for a month,
6 days in Nova Scotia,4 in MA
9 deer seen, all does (4 in MA)
1 doe harvested in MA
Saw many bald and golden eagles in Nova Scotia, very impressive.
I hope for better luck this year
Jim
|
1241.2 | Good year in Colorado. | MULEY::KOOSER | Too little time. Too many hobbies. | Tue Jan 12 1993 13:14 | 30 |
|
Days spent scouting:
2 for antelope and
1 for deer.
Days spent hunting:
6 hours for antelope and
1 hour for deer (actually 1 hour hiking and 15 minutes hunting).
Animals harvested:
1 nice antelope buck (202.53) and
and a fork-horn (270.?) mulie buck.
All on public land.
Hopefully I'll draw next year for muzzle loading elk and eastern plains
whitetail.
Mark
|
1241.3 | | ODIXIE::SHADDIX | | Tue Jan 12 1993 16:22 | 4 |
| OUR SEASON LAST FROM 20-OCT TO 2ND WEEK IN JAN. I WAS ONLY ABLE TO GO
25 DAYS.
EARL
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1241.4 | not much luck! | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Wed Jan 13 1993 19:22 | 12 |
| Spent 6 days in Routt Nat'l Forest in NW Colorado.
DRY weather caused us some problems during the 2nd elk season; didn't sight
any elk, but saw about a half dozen muley does.
I did shoot a nice snowshoe hare.
Highlight of the trip was watching my buddy Brad catch a brook trout
with his bare hands!
Jon
|
1241.5 | Here fishy fishy | CSOA1::VANDENBARK | | Thu Jan 14 1993 12:24 | 10 |
| 25 days! You lucky sucker. I guess I hunted about 15 days for deer.
1 doe with bow
1 6 point with shotgun
1 doe with flintlock.
The last day for bow season is the 15th, so I probably won't get to go.
Now, where are my fishing rods! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
Wess
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1241.6 | ONLY 9 MORE MONTHS | BTOVT::MOULTROUP | | Fri Jan 15 1993 07:00 | 11 |
|
15 evenings bow hunting
26 full days rifle hunting
8 days muzzleload hunting
2 seven point bucks with the rifle and one doe with the muzzleloader.
1 buck taken in Maine the other in Vermont. Three bucks seen in New
York but i didn't get any of them. I don't keep track of how many does
that were seen but it was a fair number.
Bruce
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1241.7 | 2 here | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | work to live, not live to work! | Fri Jan 15 1993 10:52 | 14 |
| too many days to count. took about 4 weeks vacation off for hunting.
Bow and rifle. Saw plenty of deer. Harvested 8 pointer with rifle
opening day. Harvested doe following weekend same stand, same exact
time of day.
Still lookin for a bowkill. Shootin caps off of milk jugs at 30 yds
is pretty darn good, but no meat from bow season. Maybe will shoot the
bow for competition.
Oh well, how many days until bow season again. Right! yall have a
goodun. time to pick up the fishin rod, and maybe punish myself with
golf clubs.
bob
|
1241.8 | | GLDOA::ROGERS | | Fri Jan 15 1993 14:38 | 24 |
| Well its the other way around for me. Get them opening day with the
bow. But then, carelessness, discipline, frustration, got in the way.
New Years resolution: not next year. Go to level 5: methodology and
purpose.
The levels? Something that was introduced in the safety course I took
with my sons last year.
Level One: take anything, anytime, any method (novice?)
Level two: take as many as you can get (semiskilled)
Level three: pass on the easy pickings (skilled)
Level four: the trophy hunter (craftsmen)
Level five: perfect the method (philosopher)
After a fourteen year layoff in hunting, was coming back in between
level one and two. This year was definately level three as atested by
experience in the U.P. Trophies just aren't an interest. But defining
a methodology, including why I'm am doing this, and refining it is an
attractive goal.
/bob
|
1241.9 | | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Mon Jan 18 1993 14:53 | 14 |
| I guess there's alot of skill level 1 hunters in New England... ;^)
Not too many guys I know will pass on a legal deer, as the opportunity
almost never arises where you run out of tags to fill. Do you describe a
doe within bow range as easy pickings???
FWIW, Fra
> Level One: take anything, anytime, any method (novice?)
> Level two: take as many as you can get (semiskilled)
> Level three: pass on the easy pickings (skilled)
> Level four: the trophy hunter (craftsmen)
> Level five: perfect the method (philosopher)
|
1241.10 | | GLDOA::ROGERS | | Mon Jan 18 1993 17:03 | 25 |
| There is a difference but it might be related to opportunity rather
than skill level. I've hunted in Massachusetts, Vermont, and New
Hamshire, all prior to 1977. I seem to remember relatively low deer
count/sq.mile. In Masschusetts, you might go the whole week without
seeing anything. Same thing happened to me up on the Androscogin (sp).
In Michigan, 25/30 deer/mile (3-4 times the MA. density) is considered
fair to poor. In the U.P., I've passed on three shots in the same
morning, simply because I did not feel good about taking that deer. I
did not like the way I felt after getting the youngster on 10/4/92.
Was he less aware? yes. Was he easy pickings at 20+yds? yes. Was he
the only deer I got this year? yes. Does he taste good? oh yeah!
So I want to be level 5 and am willing (for now) to forego quantity and
"give-me" shots to perfect the method. I've persistantly screwed up
that last several opportunites that developed because of method. So
just a little more concentration, dicipline and patience should make a
difference.
I could have filled all my tags, but then I would not know where I need
to improve the most. Does this make sense?
/bob
|
1241.11 | | BTOVT::WENER_R | | Tue Jan 19 1993 12:57 | 18 |
|
Isn't it a lifelong transition? All of the trophy hunters I know
have gone through these stages through their life. They've taken many
deer, then "graduated" so to speak to a level of primarily targeting
the trophy animals. I think Fra is right. In New England, just about
everyone will take any legal deer. I, personally, cannot see myself
passing up a good doe with my bow - at least not for a while. I figure
if I can get one good opportunity during a season here in Vermont, then
I'm doing ok...
- Rob
BTW, as per the base note, I bowhunted a total of 17 partial days
here in VT - only saw 5 deer and managed to take a doe. For the
rifle - I hunted 5 days in Maine, didn't see a single deer, and
hunted 9 days in VT and took a 4-pt. Only saw about 6 deer...
|
1241.12 | Depends on the area, and the budget too!!! | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Tue Jan 19 1993 14:21 | 27 |
| Rob, said it much more eloquently than me... Ditto his thoughts.
Each year, i seem to find out more private haunts, larger deer and better
bucks, and I take every precaution, spend several days scouting, and
go to great lengths to score on one of these big bucks. For the most
part I've certainly had my opportunities to take bruisers in the last
4-5 years... I feel like i'm getting much wiser with each passing year.
I'm no longer sitting in the open hardwoods (with chances for 200+ yard
shots) waiting for a deer to wander through unsuspecting.
I'm now almost exclusivly hunting some of the thickest, nastiest
sucker brush imaginable... I'm seeing fewer deer, but the ones i'm
seeing are beauties... and at much closer ranges... Unfortunately none
have been with a firearm in my hands... All were during archery, at very
close range.
Would I pass up a doe or lesser buck??? Not on your life... Which brings
me back to what Rob said, you may go the whole season with only a handful
of sightings, or opportunities to fill the freezer.
So am I a mere novice.. I don't think so, I'd like to think of myself as
a skill level 4, only smart enough to shoot a few freezer fillers
in-between.
Now if I was seeing 10-15 deer a day, I may get a little more selective ;^)
FWIW, Fra
|
1241.13 | the definition of 'trophy' varies with locale | SA1794::CHARBONND | the stars have all gone out tonite | Tue Jan 19 1993 15:48 | 27 |
| You've got something there, Fra. The trophy hunters I read about
seem mostly to live in areas with plenty of agricultural land,
and much higher deer populations than New England. Plus a lower
number of hunters per square mile. So, they see many more deer.
Under such circumstances, when you can look at a buck long enough
to estimate the B&C score of his rack, and feel confident he won't
be the only buck you'll see all season, it's doubtless a lot
easier to hold your fire.
Here in New England, if you see one legal buck every season, you're
probably an above-average hunter! For instance, I hunted ten days
with bow in Vermont, and three days with bow in Mass. and saw several
does, but none in range. Never saw horns. During rifle season in
Vermont, saw 9 does, including five that got within twenty yards.
No horns, no doe permit, so... Hunted two days in Mass. with shotgun,
saw zippo. Hunted one day in Mass. with muzzleloader, saw five, all
does, and shot one. Would I have liked a buck? Of course! Am I
happy with the doe? Well, the chili I had yesterday was delicious!
And, as it was the first deer I've taken with black powder, it's
definitely a 'trophy' in my humble little book ;-)
Anyway, you have to define 'trophy' in terms of the conditions you
hunt in. A lot of us don't have the means to travel to Texas or
Alberta or Illinois and hunt what somebody else considers a trophy.
So, we make do, and do our best.
Dana
|
1241.14 | Have no fear, my imagination is here | CSOA1::VANDENBARK | | Wed Jan 20 1993 12:08 | 12 |
| Well guys, if I ever win the Lottery, I'll buy a big spread where we
all will have a shot at a big buck. I'll build a big lodge with skeet
throwers mounted on all of the balconies with a 20 acre lake stocked
with 10lb rainbows. I'll have topless barmaids serving free drinks
while we try to decide if we will settle for the 12 or 14 pointer.
That sure sounds good! I wonder if my wife will care?
Well, it was fun while it lasted...duty calls.
Good Luck,
Wess
|
1241.15 | grandes melones | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | work to live, not live to work! | Wed Jan 20 1993 12:26 | 8 |
| Hey wess,
I would like to book a hunting trip with you. And if you wonder if
your wife will mind, I thought she was going to be one of the topless
barmaids.
bob
|
1241.16 | Big Fun...unless she reads this. | CSOA1::VANDENBARK | | Thu Jan 21 1993 10:32 | 6 |
| Harris, you always come back with something that makes me smile. I
asked my wife about it and she was really disappointed, she wanted to
be a table dancer instead......I had better run down to the store and
pickup another ticket!
Wess
|