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Everything posted by Gator
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Speaking of ladies, I had a very strange close encounter this morning (comedians, hold back the comments, please). After an unproductive couple of hours in the wind in Albion, I stopped by my property on the way home while one of the neighbors went in from the back to look for a doe he shot that crossed the boundary line (he found it). I thought he might bounce something to me, so I wanted to be in a stand close by. Anyway, I pull into where we park, which is incidentally where I pee and empty my full pee bottles, and isn't there an eight point and a doe that he's tending not twenty yards from the truck? So, I get out of the truck, go to the back and grab my bow and release, the whole while they don't move. Then I sneak to the front of the vehicle, step out and slowly slide toward them. I had the doe dead-to-rights at 15 yards. The buck was ~23 yards away in a small stand of pine and tamarack, but there were too many branches for a clean shot. So I drifted to my left, looking the whole time. There's no happy ending to this, unless you count failing to injure a deer a happy ending, which I guess it is. I never found a lane, didn't take a crappy shot, and eventually the doe blew and it was game over. Still, very cool being so close in such an unusual circumstance. Oh, and I'm willing to part with a few bottles of pee for $$$
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I sat at the edge of a swamp last night with acorns all over the place and had one small doe come through. Buddy of mine sat 200 yards away between corn and oaks and had deer crawling up his ladder to snuggle Goes to show how one hot doe in a thicket can create that perfect micro-environment, and every deer on the property will try to be with her. Boom or bust.
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Bonus!! I love me some finger in my venison. There's a guy Jay who lives on Rt 259 just North of North Chili, I believe between Stony Point and Whittier Road. He has a big sign out front. I think he's ~$65 for a standard cut...steaks wrapped in freezer paper and ground in plastic. If you're lucky, he'll let you try his appleshine.
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There must have been a Caribbean special yesterday, because all the young bucks were on the cruise Okay, that was just wrong. Both guys I hunted with yesterday took management bucks, and my buddy's customer who was hunting with him took one, as well. All three deer were sixes. I got to hold a class on field-dressing! Good times. Now, back to looking for Mr. Big. If I'm lucky I'll get a chance at a beast like Chris's.
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When I got out of my stand to start checking SD cards, there was a good one seventy yards away on the mowed trail. Headed my way? Not after he saw me step out of the thick stuff Ah, well. My buddy shot a "management" buck on our property this morning...he's gone during gun season and just wanted one for the freezer. I was with another friend I hunt with on his land last night and he had a breeding nucleus come by him. It was his first time seeing one and he had no clue what to do with bucks and doe running all over the place. Just about crapped himself. I told him, "this is why we hunt the rut". He all gung-ho to get out tonight now. Looks like we have another convert.
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Unreal! I tried with my daughter, but the day she told me, "Dad, I'm not really a hunter/fisher girl" nearly broke my heart. I guess you got to support them no matter which direction they choose to go, though. I'm glad that you're getting the opportunity to mentor your daughter in the outdoors; treasure it!
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Nice bruin! I passed on a nine last night, it was the only deer I saw. He came in perfect with the wind and offered a quartering away shot at 10 yards. I actually drew on him, but got to thinking that it's early in the season, and given his mass, if he'd have been a six, would I have shot him? No. Okay, there was my answer. So I let down and he walked away sniffing at the ground in search mode. I have an awesome nine with a full third coming off his right side that I'd like a crack at, though. Let him step in front like that..
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Yeah, slow for me too. I had a spike under the stand for half an hour, then a six walk by on the trail, and two doe just as I was ready to leave. I pulled all the SD cards and they each had pics of scrubs on them, but no giants. A couple of eights that looked decent, but still nocturnal. There was one four point with balls hanging down to his knees though ...it must be close.
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Seen some good scrape activity and a couple of really decent bucks this morning...my buddy had two within twenty five yards from the stand, an eight and a nine, either of which could have been shooters if he'd wanted, and we bumped two that were traveling together as we were checking the cameras. Both were outside their ears. I am very hopeful that some decent ones are going to start showing up. The pic is from last night, so probably one of the bucks we saw this morning. Back at it soon on some stands that haven't seen any pressure yet this year. I'm in the mood to get some product made at Constanza's, so a doe may hit the dirt tonight.
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If tonight was any indication, you'll be good. Maybe it was the cold front moving in, but there were deer everywhere this evening. I left the woods early because of the rain and wind, but the fields were full...I don't want to arrow a deer in the rain though.
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DEC response to Salmon Numbers
Gator replied to troubles's topic in New York Fishing Reports - Lake Ontario (South Shore)
I've got a Ph.D. and twenty five years under my belt, and I still can't make sense of it I'm seeing lots of guys posting here who are frustrated with the fishery and with some of the practices of folks who might be less...ethical...than the majority of LOU members. Heck, I'm one of them. But this is a friendly debate. In general, I'd expect this to have degenerated to name calling on most forums. I'm proud that hasn't occurred on LOU. Let's keep it that way. We can agree to disagree, respectfully. We're all on the same team. -
DEC response to Salmon Numbers
Gator replied to troubles's topic in New York Fishing Reports - Lake Ontario (South Shore)
I hear you that the run is good now on the Salmon. But if the majority of the fish are condensed into one big "late" push, it could create the perception that there are more salmon around than is true. Probably some combination of all of the theories that have been posted here is closest to the truth though. Let's hope for a more normal winter and we'll see what we see. -
Interesting evening in my treestand-double on coyotes
Gator replied to Tall Tails's topic in Big / Small Game
Yotes supposedly can breed with wolves. In the old days, eastern coyotes were much smaller. Then they went practically extinct. The theory is that the western coyote caught some timberwolf DNA as it migrated back though Canada to repopulate the East and now the "new" sub-species here is larger than the western breed. True? Even if not, it's a good story. As was yours! -
I've used two part flexible epoxy glue that's for rod building on my boots. Two years of abuse and still going strong.
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DEC response to Salmon Numbers
Gator replied to troubles's topic in New York Fishing Reports - Lake Ontario (South Shore)
So, you guys know me and I'm sure not an enemy of charter boat captains. But I'm not too bad at math either, and Rolmops has a point. If the salmon fishing sucks, captains put their sports on lakers. With salmon, you're taking a short-lived fish out of the system and they stock 2 million of them a year. With a laker, you're taking a long-lived fish that they only stock half a million. That's a double whammy, because the number of fish in the lake is determined not by stocking numbers, but by turnover, same as any other biological system. Any system with fast turnover recovers more quickly, less so other systems. So, taking more lakers (which is fine in my book) is going to require stocking more lakers to keep up. Unlike kings, where it won't make as much of a dent, what you'd think would have minor impact is exacerbated with lakers because of slow turnover. And the population will more rapidly show a trend toward smaller fish as the size distribution is reduced and larger fish get taken out of the system. If, on the other hand, you don't replenish the population, it will take a nosedive quite quickly. So, stocking more lakers is not a completely bad idea, and in fact it means that DEC is tacitly acknowledging the increased pressure on them. I for one would hate to work at a government agency where you have to balance the practical with the political, then make everybody feel like they're getting cherry Kool Aid. -
I used to work for Ellen Marsden and Chuck Kruger, who were Cornell University researchers studying natural lake trout reproduction in Lake Ontario. I spent a summer at the Little Moose facility in the Adirondack League Club, which they managed. Their early work from the late '80s and 90s is great reading if you want to gain perspective on the issue. Alternatively, here's a link to the GLFC lake trout management plan drafted in 2014, if you'd prefer some lighter fare . Enjoy! http://www.glfc.org/lakecom/loc/Lake%20Ontario_Lake_Trout_Strategy_Nov_2014.pdf