I think the does went into hiding. Only deer i saw was a nice buck. Got into my downwind shooting lane and busted me before I drew. Buck was cruising at 10:45.
Baldness I think is a testosterone thing. A couple of years ago I shot a buck and went to move it by grabbing it by the mane. I fell over backwards with huge clumps of fur in my hand. WTF. So I tried again and duplicated the feat. I could have dry plucked that deer in 5 minutes.
I don’t buy the moon itself has some weird effect on hormone levels but rather the moon’s effect on the ability to see in the dark. Full moon they run around all night especially in heavily hunted areas or areas near human intrusion. The deep woods spots I hunt in southern tier have a lot more daytime activity activity than my WNY spots in smaller plots.
Nice! I would like to think the good folk on LOU had a hand in bringing attention to the condition of Altmar. Congrats to everyone who showed interest.
Training dogs on State Land
I would be interested to see if it is just me or is it conceivable that professional pheasant hunters running their dogs on pheasants planted for hunters on state land seem like wildlife harassment and counter to the spirit of the pheasant hunting stocking program? I have come across numerous people both single dog owners and professional dog handlers that are merely getting dog work on stocked birds at Darien Lake State Park. These groups in question don't even bring a gun or just walk with an unloaded gun. The reasons I have been given is "they are getting their dogs ready for South Dakota" or they are just their for the joy of their dogs." At first blush it seems like a good idea for the dogs. Who doesn't enjoy seeing working dogs at their craft? But on the other hand, having one dog handler with 5 dogs working over and flushing birds out of their stocked areas, ruins it for everybody else. Am I crazy or does this practice seem counter to the principals of offering access to pheasant hunting for the average Joe?
I agree ...... I doubt they will take eggs into November as they don’t like to grow fry to then later kill them. It would be my hope they adopt later egg take strategies as a change in policy.
My hope is that they continue pulling eggs from late run November fish. This decade of warm water in tributaries has ruined the salmon runs on most of the south shore frog water locations. I can remember as a teenager fishing Eighteen Mile Creek in early September during the 80's with leaves changing color in the gorge. Late runs in November at least allow for non-lethal trip temps.