Saturday, September 29, 2007

Three new books just in time for the hunting season

© By Othmar Vohringer

I love to read a good book, even more so if the book is about hunting, in the coziness of my home office, sitting in a comfortable chair next to the fireplace. To me this is about as relaxing as it gets.

The last two days I found three books that are just perfect to improve your hunting success this coming hunting season.

The first book is written by fellow blogger Steven Kendus

Hunting The First State
A Guide to Delaware Hunting
By Steven Kendus

Perfectly situated on the eastern seaboard between the Chesapeake Bay to the west and the Delaware River, Delaware Bay, and Atlantic Ocean to the east, Delaware has proven to be a hunting paradise for local sportsmen. For centuries, outdoorsmen and outdoorswomen have harvested the natural riches offered by the wild game that inhabit Delaware’s deciduous forests, salt and freshwater marshes, and cultivated crop fields. Common game, such as white-tailed deer, Canada geese, and varied species of ducks have been targeted by the majority of Delaware hunters, but woodcock, quail, snow geese, crows, squirrels, and rabbits are also plentiful in Delaware and provide Delaware sportsmen with hours of hunting enjoyment each season. Join Delawarean Steven Kendus as he uses his hunting wisdom, experience, and research to preserve Delaware’s hunting legacy by sharing important history, tactics, locations, tips, and tricks associated with Delaware hunting.

Knowing what a savvy hunter Steven Kendus is I am sure that his tips tricks and strategies have applications in other states and areas, other than Delaware, too.

The next book is one that every experienced and aspiring hunter should own.

Mapping Trophy Bucks
Using Topographic Maps to Find Deer
By Brad Herndon

I have often said in my deer hunting seminars, and will keep saying it until the day I die, that the key to successful deer hunting is studying and knowing the structure of the land. This is especially so on hard hunted public land. Deer travel from fod source to bedding - or to escape hunting pressure – by utilizing the lay of the land and so do the trophy bucks when they chase does.
On 192 pages of Mapping Trophy Bucks author Brad Herndon teaches you how to use topographical maps and wind directions to pinpoint deer travel routes and to place your stands in advance of the deer season. This is likely the best $24.95 a hunter ever will spend.

You can read more about these books on Whitetail Deer Passion (my other blog)


And finally a turkey hunting book that is right up my alley.
I am a self confessed turkey hunting addict with that said it is obvious that I not only hunt turkeys in the traditional spring season but also in the fall and winter, or as I call it The Forgotten Season. It is with turkey hunting enthusiasm that I am announcing today the publishing of a new book.

Fall and Winter Turkey Hunting Handbook
By Steve Hickoff

For the sportsman who thrills at the booming gobble of a spring tom during mating season and wants to extend that exhilarating feeling, Steve Hickoffs Fall and Winter Turkey Hunters Handbook offers the perfect remedy. The fall and winter season not only allows a wider variety of hunting options than the spring, but it also requires different hunting tactics and skills. Hickoff examines fall turkey behavior and vocalizations and provides details on locating, scouting, and calling fall gobblers, with tips for mapping flock patterns and identifying changing flock composition. Includes the little-known strategy of hunting turkeys with dogs, using them to find and flush flocks. The material on firearms, ammunition, and archery tackle will benefit all turkey hunters--fall, winter, or spring.

You can read more about these books on Wild Turkey Fever (my other blog)

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Friday, September 28, 2007

Explaining hunting to non-hunters

Today I found the following article that I want to share with you all. It is a very well written piece, explaining what hunting means to most of us. Enjoy!

Explaining hunting to non-hunters
By Ball Gary

A man I admire very much, a passionate hunter, wildlife scientist, scholar and teacher perhaps sums it all up best in a line which ends virtually all of his correspondence, e-mail or snail-mail.

He writes: "For those who understand, no explanation is necessary and for those who do not, none is possible."

This is a pretty blunt encapsulation of the thinking hunter's dilemma. How do we explain hunting to non-hunters?

I've spent a lot of time in my life trying to explain the gap which divides those of us who hunt and those who do not hunt. I'm not sure that I have had any success at all, despite all that I have written. Almost invariably, those who don't like hunting focus on killing, on taking the life of a living creature. When I try to explain hunting, I focus on almost everything but the actual killing. To kill or not to kill is the question which divides us, and one which will likely continue to divide us.

I am the descendant of generation upon generation of successful hunters. When I hunt, I connect in a deliberate and conscious way with my ancestors, my heritage and my environment. I am the only creature in the planet's food chain capable of making a reasoned decision to take or to spare the life of another creature. I am the only predator in the ecosystem with a rational understanding of my impact upon that system. I am the only predator capable of deliberately choosing to assist in the survival of another species. I make those choices because I am a hunter, because I am connected with my ecosystem in the most intimate way, through the cycle of life, death and rebirth.

I know first hand where the meat on my table comes from.

I am not isolated from the food chain by an assembly line of hired hands: producers, slaughterhouse workers, butchers, packers, truckers and supermarket owners. I am aware of how and why wild things die.


Read the full article here>

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Disgruntled Hunters Take Scent-Lok On

© By Othmar Vohringer

The Minnesota Star Tribune carried a story on September 23, 2007 about five Minnesotan hunters that filed a lawsuit against Scent-Lok the manufacturer of “Scent-Lok” and “ScentBlocker” among other carbon lined clothing lines. The Plaintiffs also filed lawsuits against Cabela’s, Bass-Pro Shops, Gander Mountain and Browning. The afore mentioned retailers sell Scent-Lok and Scent Blocker clothing which the Plaintiffs claim has duped hunters out of millions of dollars with false advertising. I am not going to bore you here with all the details about this case, you can read all about it by some of my fellow outdoor bloggers. In fact I didn’t want to cover this story at all but then I read the court documents(pdf file) and thought that I would voice my opinion on this issue because I start to smell BS. The story has been extensively covered by my friend Bryan on the deerPhD, here, here, here and here. There is more of it on the blogs of The Newshound, Skinny Moose Media, Black Bear Blog and Scent Lok Science.

To me it looks like that these Minnesotan hunters are either on a get-rich-quick-scheme, it would not be the first time that folks sue large companies to better their finances and sadly it would not be the last time either. Or they are fools and fell for an advertising gimmick and are now upset because the big bucks didn’t jump in their lap.

Read the court documents, and I am sure you will agree with me that something stinks. I get very leery when I read phrases like “on behalf of all American hunters”.

Here is my opinion and why I feel so strongly about this scam these Minnesotan hunters stage. First it’s all about common sense. Plain good old common sense tells me that there is no such thing as 100% human scent elimination, regardless what any advertising might claim. Just as there is no deer call or buck lure that causes monster bucks falling over themselves as they come running in to your stand location.

I have been using a Scent-Lok suit for over ten years now and it works. While I am no scientist I have my observations to back it up. Since I wear a Scent-Lok suit deer sightings have improved considerably. Do I think that the Scent-Lok suit is the magic hunters have been praying for? Absolutely not! Despite wearing a Scent-Lok suit I still take my regular precautions to stay as scent free as humanly possible. My hunting day starts with a shower and once on my hunting site I change into a freshly laundered set of under and outer garments. With all these procedures I am still very vigilant of wind direction and air current. If the wind is not right for a stand location I wont hunt it regardless how many deer move by that stand.

Here is what I think the Scent-Lok suit does, it lessens the human odor and thus fools a the deer to think that I am still a mile away when in fact I am sitting right over them. Did I buy the Scent-Lok suit because I believed what the advertising said it does? I am going to let you in on a secret here. I truly believe that only fools believe in advertising. Yet advertising is very important, it sells products and that keeps the hunting economy alive. A healthy and strong hunter economy is important to sustain our hunting rights and future.

I sincerely hope that this lawsuit is thrown out by the judge. Should the Plaintiffs win this court case it would open the floodgates for other such frivolous lawsuits against hunting companies. To me that whole mess looks a bit like the stunt Oprah Winfrey pulled on the Texas cattle rangers when she took them to court just because she doesn’t approve of eating hamburgers and steaks.

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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Blog Update

© By Othmar Vohringer

As some of you may have noticed this blog has a new banner. The other day I checked in on the Wild Turkey Feverblog and to my horror I noticed that Blogger pulled the fancy template I used without warning me in advance of that stunt. Well to be fair to Blogger, they likely don’t know what templates each blogger uses. Needless to say the Wild Turkey Fever blog looked a right old mess.

There was no way around it I had to chose a new template and work all day long to get all the extras back in place and everything in order. While I was at it I thought that I might just as well give all my blogs the same template and the same look, hence the new banner on this blog.

After the Wild Turkey Fever blog I directed my attention to the Whitetail Deer Passion blog. That blog too had some outdated data on it in urged need of replacing or updating. With the deer hunting season in full swing or soon opening in other states and Canadian provinces, the traffic on that blog has grown considerably and the last thing I want is that visitors find old and outdated material.

In the coming days and weeks, with time being still very short due to my hectic work schedule (it hasn’t let up as I hoped it would) I will spend more time writing for the Whitetail Deer Passion blog.

My email in-box is filled to the rim each day with messages from desperate hunters looking for a last minute solution on, what else, how to kill a big buck this year. The mails I get can summarized in three categories, “What scent should I use?”, “Where to hang my stand?” followed by “Where will the big bucks be?”. Interestingly enough, rarely if ever does somebody ask me, “How do I properly scout an area?”

I believe very firmly, and successful hunters will agree with me, that scouting is the most important aspect of deer hunting period. Hunters that do not scout or do not scout right will have to depend solely on luck. As I said in the coming days and weeks I will give the answers and my opinions on all the above questions on the Whitetail Deer blog.

Oh, I almost fogot! Talking about deer hunting. Today I cam across a new deer hunting blog. Well that’s not quite, the blog found me and then I went and checked it out. The nybowhunter is written by Marc an avid hunter for 11 years and according to his own admission, an obsessed bowhunter for the last six years. The blog is new but you can already see where it is heading with the few very well written and informative articles interlaced with posts in the hunting diary style. Marc also has a neat slideshow and features several decent videos. If you’re like Marc and me an obsessed deer hunter then you definitely should check it out.

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Sunday, September 23, 2007

Proud Hunter Moments

© By Othmar Vohringer

Today I would like to share with you two proud moments in my hunting career. As most of you are maybe aware by now, a good part of my time is dedicated to the introduction of young and new hunters into our way of life.


This is Terri Lynne Benoit, sister of noted outdoor writer Toby Benoit. She took part in the junior division of the Florida State Turkey Calling Championship hosted by the National Wild Turkey Federation
and Bass Pro Shops in Orlando, Fl. She made it to the second place.

You can read the full story about Terri on Wild Turkey Fever>



Corey, one of the many novice hunters that I have “Godfathered” over the years, sent this picture to me. He tells me what a proud moment it was when he harvested his very first mule deer buck. Well, I am mighty proud of him too. The only regret I have is that I could not have been on his side and share this moment with him personally.

Read the full story about Corey on Whitetail Deer Passion>

To read more about the SHS Othmar Vohringer commitment in “Passing the Heritage On” and take part in a lively online hunter community join the SHS Hunting Chat Forum and take part in the discussions and experience exchange with hunters from all over North America.

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Saturday, September 22, 2007

Grizzly Bear Attacks Man

Source: Billings Gazette

A Yellowstone National Park employee who was attacked by a grizzly Sunday said the bear "came out of nowhere" and flew at him, a Park Service official said Monday.

Ken Meyer, the park's safety officer, said he eventually got off three shots and believed one of them hit the bear, according to Al Nash, a Yellowstone spokesman who spoke with Meyer by telephone Monday.

The attack happened just north of the park, near Gardiner.

Meyer suffered injuries to his back, left leg, stomach and both forearms, Nash said.

Read full story here>

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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Protect your rights.

© By Othmar Vohringer

A little more than a week ago Kristine sent me an email with which she alerted me to a blog that had some of my articles posted. Kristine asked if I was aware of it and I was not. A link to that particular blog was thankfully provided with the email and so needless to say, I wanted to see with my own eyes what was happening. My jaw almost dropped to the floor when I discovered that every second article on that blog was a copy and paste job off my blog. The fake links back to the original article did not work.

The blog featured an extraordinary amount of advertising that led me quickly to the conclusion that this whole blog was a scheme to garner income from advertisers but without doing any of the work to earn that money. There was no contact information to this blogger and I use the term “blogger” very loosely here. I made a comment on his blog about the fact that this article had been posted without my consent and would the publisher please remove it from his blog. The next day when I checked the article was still up but my comment was gone.

Once again I posted a comment on that fraudulent blog but with a stiff warning added this time, that if not all my articles were removed within 24 hours I would take steps to have it shut down. Again, when I checked back the next day not only were all the articles still there but the guy actually stole yet another one from my blog and posted it on his. And so, true to my warning, I contacted the blog providers (Maxblog.Eu) and let them know about my problems with a copyright violator on their blogging net. Within two days I got an email from Maxblog.Eu informing me that they looked into the matter and consequently shut the offending blog down.

We may not often think about the fact that what we write on our blogs is our intellectual property and protected by the National and International Copyright law. But when people lack the most common manners and think that they can just take whatever they want without asking first we have to defend what is ours. Besides having the blog shut down, another good thing came out of all of this: I remembered a neat feature that I installed on my blog. It’s called Copyscape and it is a script that lets me check in a matter of seconds if my articles have been published elsewhere without me knowing about it. In the future all the articles that I write will carry a copyright plus the Copyscape banner as a warning to potential copyright violators and as a reminder for me to use that neat tool more often.

Interestingly enough my wife last week wrote an article about the intellectual property rights of a person who has passed away. In my wife’s case the bulk of her intellectual property is artwork and photography. It is short but well written and thought provoking piece that is relevant to anybody who posts content that is publicly accessible in print or on the Internet.


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Friday, September 14, 2007

Illinois Governor Signs Bill to Put Deer Herd Under Local Control

Local control gives anti's the edge

September 14, 2007 (Illinois)

A new Illinois law will endanger hunting by stripping the Department of Natural Resources of its authority to regulate deer populations.
On Aug 28, Gov. Rod Blagojevich signed HB 3425. The provision will allow local governments to manage deer herds using methods other than hunting. A local government that conducts a DNR-approved study of alternative deer population controls in addition to hunting may now unilaterally implement the alternative methods deemed useful.
“There is great danger in a law that diverts wildlife management decision-making away from the state, which has the resources and expertise to make such decisions,” said U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance President Bud Pidgeon. “Putting wildlife in the hands of local governments makes it easier for anti-hunters to strike against hunting, not to mention the fact that it creates a patchwork approach that will cripple successful wildlife management.”
House Bill 3425 creates a slippery slope. Today, the call is for local control of deer herds, but anti-hunters will run with the concept and advocate local management of all hunting and trapping.
House Bill 3425 passed the House of Representatives on April 17, by a vote of 70 to 40. It passed the Senate on May 31, by a vote of 33 to 23.

Source: U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance

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Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Weekend Trip to Merritt

© By Othmar Vohringer

On Saturday morning Ernie, my wife’s cousin’s husband and my hunting partner, drove the three-hour trip to Merritt to check on our hunting cabin and do a bit of scouting. From the highway in Merritt
we drove another 40km (24.8 miles) on logging roads through the wilderness until we arrived at our hunting location.

Whenever I come to this part of the country it’s like being in a different world were time has no meaning. There is no sound of civilization - even airplanes don’t fly over that area – all you can hear is the birds singing and the humming of insects. The reason why there are no other hunters in that area is because it is to far off the beaten track and it is quite rough and hilly country to hike as you can see in the pictures below.

We arrived in the mid afternoon after spending an hour or so removing an illegal roadblock made up of big boulders and tree trunks. We encountered that roadblock last year but due to the lack of equipment needed we just could remove some of it so the Jeep could pass through. This time we came armed with pulleys, a come-along, a winch, ropes and chainsaws among other tools like shovels and pickax. Armed like that the roadblock had no chance of withstanding our onslaught.

On we went to where the bumpy wilderness road ends and big bucks begin. A short, one mile hike up the steep hill and we stood in front of our hunting cabin – actually it is a homemade type of wall tent. It seems the cabin survived last year’s harsh winter in very good condition. The only damage we could find was at the back of it where a young bear, judging from the claw marks on the wall, shredded the plastic window. By the time we fixed the window and a few other minor things it was time to go for an evening walk to see what game animals we could find.

Just a few short steps from the camp I spooked three mule deer, two does and one very huge buck. I did not see the buck’s antlers in full, but judging from the little I did see and the way he swayed his head from side to side in order to get his head through the brush it’s safe to assume he is a monster. As we walked through a cut with lots of blown down trees it became quickly apparent that this is a preferred bedding area for the deer as we encountered bed after bed and lots of smaller rubs.

After investigating this cut a bit more we saw lots of fresh deer droppings and Ernie spooked another good-sized buck. We were quite pleased with what we had seen so far but what was to come was even more pleasing if not remarkable. Walking along a forest edge we saw a big cow moose with a calf not 30 yards from us grazing in the remains of the fading daylight. Since it was getting darker we decided to walk in a circle back to our camp and by doing so we came through an area that we had not hunted last year.

In this new area we also found plenty of deer sign that confirmed our knowledge that the whole area is home to some very large mule deer bucks. To our surprise we also found lots of bear sign such as scat and clawing marks on deadfall trees. Since we usually hunt in that area during the November rut, when bears hibernate, we had no clue that there are so many bears in that area. Seeing all that bear sign led to the decision to hunt during the bear fall season too and not only in the deer rut. We also found plenty of evidence of a growing moose population in the area and we’re exited about that -we always knew that there were some moose in the area but it seems that the population has grown quite a bit from the past years. Up to now we only can harvest a cow or calf moose, but if the heard is growing like it appears to be doing then we hope that there soon will be a bull moose season too. We did not seen any bulls but we did see plenty of evidence that whatever bulls are in the area might very well be of trophy standard.

By the time we came back to the cabin it was pitch black and we made good us of the GPS with it’s illuminated screen which led us back quite accurately. However, never completely trusting modern electronic gadgets I make it a habit of also carrying an ordinary compass with me in the woods. And a good habit it is because once we got back to the camp the GPS screen went blank and the flashing warning “Low Battery” was blinking -then the screen went completely dark. Back home I had meant to take spare batteries with me but then I forgot them, which just goes to show that you don’t want to rely 100% on electronics that rely on (having!) batteries. Without a working GPS or a compass it would have been a very long night looking for a cabin hidden in the middle of a dense and very large woodlot.

That night I couldn’t fall asleep which is very unusual since normally I am sound asleep the very instant my head hits the pillow. Wide awake I lay on the bunk in a cozy sleeping bag gazing through the skylight at a clear night sky where millions of stars sparkled while listening to sounds of nature. Far off in the distance I heard a coyote singing and a second later another coyote much closer to the cabin answered him back. I wondered what they had to say to each other. A mouse was squeaking under the floorboard obviously happy to be in a coyote-safe place. The nightly serenade of sounds continued with owl hoots and a deer bleat. From the direction of the bog I heard a moose answering another moose so far away that my ears could not hear it. Next was a loon calling out probably disturbed in its sleep by the moose. Listening to the nightly wildlife and nature serenade I finally fell asleep dreaming of happy hunting.

The first beam of sunlight early in the morning entering the skylight woke me up. After breakfast and a steaming hot cup of black coffee I was ready to explore the area some more. Ernie and I hiked on Sunday morning at least 15 miles, exploring and scouting the vast wilderness around the camp. The morning and afternoon produced still more wildlife sightings and signs and put us in a great mood as we anticipated the upcoming hunting season. Eventually we had to turn back and pack up our camp but we were pretty enthusiastic with such a promising looking hunting area thoroughly scouted out. On our drive out we visited a few remote lakes to check out the fishing potential. Another hour’s drive later and civilization had us in its iron grip with maddening traffic on the highway. Early evening saw me tired but very happy and refreshed back home in the arms of my loving wife. I am ready and energized to face the rigors of everyday life while dreaming of the upcoming November, and possibly October, hunt. There only remains one thing to do and that is to get my butt out to the shooting range and finally shoot my brand new Weatherby Vanguard rifle in.


Here are a few photos from the trip. Enjoy!











The quaint frontier town of Merritt, British Columbia, on the horizon behind the hills is where our hunting territory begins with miles of wilderness seemingly untouched by humans.











Where roads end big bucks begin. This is the end of the road -from here on in its on foot or horseback only.











This is what the area we hunt looks like. Dense forest with open areas created by logging and brush fires. The perfect habitat for mule deer, bears and other wildlife.











Ernie is glassing a hillside across a valley looking for wildlife and possible hunting spots to stalk a mule deer buck this November.











This is the beginning of a steep and long hike to our hunting cabin.



















This is the rub that got me hooked on this hunting location. I found a lot more rubs like this one last November. Only very large deer are able to “skin” a good-sized tree like this one in such a manner.





















This is one of many rubs and rub lines we found this year. It is signs like these that tells an experienced hunter a lot about the trophy quality of bucks in a hunting area.





















Here is the stunner of this years scouting trip. This is a rub made by a very large bull moose. Look at the height the rub is at: Ernie is about 6ft. and with outstretched arms he still cannot reach the top of the rub. This gives you a good idea of how large the bull moose that made this particular rub is. Monster is the expression that comes to mind here. As mentioned in the article above, in this area bull moose cannot be harvested, only moose cows and calves. However if the moose population keeps growing and at the same rapid pace it has over the last few years that might soon change and I’ll be ready to go after the bulls that make rubs like that.

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Monday, September 10, 2007

USSA Working to Strip Anti-Hunting Language from Public Policy

Lowey puts anti-hunting rhetoric in federal report

Language has been added to a U.S. House Committee report that will wipe out funding for international conservation programs that facilitate hunting.

Congresswoman Nita Lowey, chair of the House Foreign Appropriations Subcommittee, has climbed onto her anti-hunting soapbox to make a statement in U.S. public policy that hunting is not favored by Congress. In the committee report for the House-passed State and Foreign Operations Appropriations bill, Lowey’s staff added the following statement at the behest of the Humane Society of the United States:

“The Committee is concerned about reports that USAID directly and indirectly supports recreational, sport and trophy hunting in its assistance programs in Africa. The Committee directs USAID to provide no funds to programs that support or promote recreational, sport, or trophy hunting as a conservation tool.”

The USSA and other sportsmen organizations are working with key federal lawmakers to remove the anti-conservation language. Although it is not in the bill to become law, it is a specific recommendation by a committee that holds the purse strings for agencies that implement government programs.

“Lawmakers use committee reports to issue edicts to federal agencies recommending preferred courses of action relative to specific issues,” said Bill Horn, USSA director of federal affairs. “Agencies don’t often buck the committee suggestions.”

Successful international conservation programs use hunting as a management tool. They emulate the United States, which has effectively used hunting as a conservation tool for over a century. These programs, especially in Africa, engage local communities and are very effective: poaching is reduced, wildlife populations prosper, and natural resources like water are conserved.
“The misguided House report language stymies effective programs and will hurt conservation efforts,” adds Horn.

The USSA and other organizations have stopped several recent federal anti-hunting efforts. It beat back an overt bill rider to ban bear hunting on federal land, and recently defeated an amendment that would have prohibited Americans from hunting polar bears in Canada.

Source: U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance

Friday, September 07, 2007

I am gone again over the weekend

Early tomorrow morning my hunting friends and I head out to our hunting cabin to fix it up and get it ready for November when we go back to hunt the mule deer rut. If I find time I would love to do a bit scouting too while there.

There will also be days during next week where I wont write on the blog. Next week is the main salmon migration time. It is expected that over 20 million salmon mover up the Fraser River. I am sure you understand that I have to spend some evenings after work on the river with rod in the hand rather than on the computer.

The Pink Salmon Are Back

Last weekend we celebrated Labor Day. That meant three days no working. Such occasions are good times to relax from every day stress with a fishing rod in the hand on a lake or river. I am fortunate in that our home is in the middle of a great fishing area. The timing was perfect because September of each odd year marks the return of the pink salmon to the Fraser River. An estimated 20 million pinks move from the ocean into the Fraser. The pink salmon is the smallest of the salmons due to his short live span of only two years. But what this fish lacks in size it makes more than up with its aggressiveness, which makes the pink a good game fish for entry level salmon fishers.

This was my very first time going specifically after salmon but it was definitely not my last time. My wife accompanied me on the trips to the Fraser River to take pictures of the beautiful surroundings. I hooked several fish of various sizes but I also hooked my wife on fishing. Having my wife voicing an interest in fishing made the trip even more special to me and I am looking forward to head out on my next fishing trip with my new fishing partner.
















The first day we arrived right at dawn. This part of the Fraser River is tidal water. When we arrived the tide just started to come in. Pink salmon use the tides reversed current to swim upstream.





























Ten minutes into the fishing and I landed my first fish. My wife to a picture against the upcoming sun creating this silhouette, I like this picture and how it turned out. In the background you can see some heavy rain clouds coming up on the horizon. About an hour later these clouds where above us and started promptly to leak. But it takes more than a little rain to scare a fisher away, especially if he has the first catch of the day in the cooler box. Where there is one fish there must be more.












Despite a little rain I kept casting the lure as far out as I could. This one of many hundred casts in the three days of fishing frenzy.




























This is the result of tireless fishing in weater that could not make its mind up what it wanted. A few minutes sunshine was followed by rain and then sunshine again. Each day I limited out and thanks to the salmon run and my efforts the freezer is half full with delicious salmon waiting to be smoked or grilled.

This particular fish is not a pink salmon. As mentioned above I am a novice to salmon fishing and my species identification has not fully developed yet. Having said that I am not 100% sure what salmon this is. It could be a small coho or a sockeye. Pink salmon have a spots on their tails and this one has none. Perhaps one of the many fishers that read my blog can tell me what kind on salmon this particular one is.

The salmon run gets right now into the full swing and I will be back on the Fraser River almost every day of next week. We only live about a ten minute drive from the tidal portion of the Fraser River and if I go right after work I can walk to my spot in five minutes.

On this trip I used the following equipment.















The 7’ Ulgly Stick rod from Shakespeare with a medium action was perfect for the task. Loaded with 10 pound Stern transparent monofilament line made it a perfect salmon outfit.













On this occasion I field tested salmon spoons from the Canadian company Gibbs. Salmons like the colors pink, red and chartreuse. On this trip the solid pink and pink with white worked best. But as any salmon fisher will tell you, the preference of colors can change from one body of water to the next and from one week to the next.














All my rods are stored and transported in one of these Guide Series rod cases from Plano.













This is one of the neatest fishing tackle boxes I came across in a long time. The Flambeau Quick Draw box. It’s small size perfect for a short trip, but don’t be fooled by the size. This tackle box comes with plenty of storage space to keep all your lures and tools you need for a full day of fishing.

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Thursday, September 06, 2007

Write About the Good Week: A Special Hunter

Many of the regular readers here may remember that Kristine from the Hunt Smart. Think Safety Blog issued some weeks ago a challenge to the founding members of the Outdoor Bloggers Summit. The challenge, called “Write About the Good Week”, stipulates that we should pick one of the many outstanding conservation organizations and highlight them and their mission in an article on our blogs.

I am the first Outdoor Bloggers Summit member that has broken the challenge rules and instead I highlighted the hunters as a community and the good they do for wildlife conservation. Today I am going to break the rules again by picking one particular person that has gained my respect over the last couple of months.

Matt Corrigan is a teenager from New Jersey. What makes him special is the fact that he does not come from a hunting background and yet he became a hunter all by his own drive. But it doesn’t stop there. Matt is active in the hunting community and wildlife conservation with a maturity and eagerness that would put many adults to shame. Just how serious Matt is about the continuation of our hunting heritage can be best described in the fact that I am so impressed by him that I made him the youth moderator on my SHS Hunting Chat Forum. I put him in charge of the “Passing the Heritage On” Forum, a place on my forum dedicated to young and novice hunters.

I have been thinking long and hard how I best could introduce Matt to you and then came an idea in my head. Why not let Matt tell his story of becoming a hunter and conservationist in his own words.

So here it is. Enjoy

Matt’s Story

I first got the notion to start hunting when I was about 12 years old. I was watching ESPN for about a month or two and was watching all the hunting shows that were on Sunday morning. I came up to my parents and asked “ Hey mom, dad, do you think that I could go hunting?” My parents immediately said no, at first. I collected information on the Internet on how to get started hunting and what it would take for me to get a license. Once again I went up to my parents, but this time I had prepared information for them to look over and think about. They told me “ Ok we will let you take your hunter education course, but who will take you hunting?” At the time I didn’t know a soul who hunted so I thought at that time I was out of luck.

It wasn’t even a week when I joined the track team. I knew almost everybody from school or other events I took place in. Then I met this one kid, John, who I had no clue who he was, it turns out that his dad was the shot put coach for the track team, and they were both very avid hunters. So I got to know John very well for that track season, and at the season him and me walked out as best friends. Now it was around the middle of June and I was hanging out with him one day, I asked him “How do you get started in hunting?” he responded “ well when I was 10, my dad took me to my shotgun, bow and muzzleloader hunter education courses and from there we went as often as possible.” I told him that I was thinking about hunting for a long period of time. He got all excited and immediately offered to hunt with him. Since I had nobody else to go with I gladly took up his offer. Before I actually went hunting I had to pass a mandatory hunter education course for each of the three disciplines (shotgun, bow and arrow, muzzleloader/rifle).

First I took my shotgun course, which in fact was so much easier than I anticipated, and passed it with a 99% on the written test and 100% on the field course. I went hunting for a year and within that time I had my first ever hunt, which was youth waterfowl day. During that day only people under 16 are allowed to hunt, but they have to be accompanied by a licensed adult. I woke up about 5:00 am to the sound of my alarm clock blaring. I quickly jumped out of bed, put on my hunting clothes and ate a quick bowl of cheerios. I got my gun and box of steel shot waiting for me by the front door. Now John’s dad drives an older model Chevy Suburban which makes quite a bit of noise while coming down a quiet road at 5:30am so you don’t have to see the truck before you know its time to get out the door. We got down to the river, got the gear in the boat and got down to our spot. Now before this, I was very used to shooting one shot at clay targets as I did it often. Now I am out in a boat and its dark and I have 3 shells in my gun, every time a duck went by I would shoot once, usually miss, and that’s it. John’s dad would tell me “ MATT! Shoot again, shoot e’m again!” and I would pump out another shell and by that time they were long gone. This went on for about 4 times. Then at 8:00am we can hear 2 geese were coming in about 10 yards just off the surface of the water, John’s dad is telling us to get ready to shoot. Then all of a sudden 2 geese come flying just into our line of sight, which turns out to be 20 yards. John shoots twice and misses I do the shoot once and let em go routine I did before and again John’s dad yells out “ MATT! Shoot again, shoot e’m again!” so I crank out a shell of my Remington 870 express 20 ga. and shoulder the gun, Now the 2 geese are 40 yards away and turning to go back down river, I pull up, lead the behind goose about 2 ft and shoot. The goose crumples and crashes into the water due to a precisely placed shot to the head/neck area. All three of us went back to the house with smiles on our faces. I only have one story that has to just about beat out that one, It was my first turkey hunt on youth turkey day, but that story is for another time.

Now I hunt and fish with John and his father every chance that I get. They are wonderful people and I couldn’t be happier than to call them my friends. Now this just goes to show you, if you really put your mind to something that you want very badly, you just might get what you have wished for.

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Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Wildlife Images by Artemis Graphics and Design

Many readers enjoyed the wildlife images I posted in my last article Oh Deer A Bear Arthur from the Simply Outdoors Blog suggested that I should link the images to larger pictures so readers could appreciate better the quality of wildlife images my wife takes.

The pictures I use on this blog are all hosted by Photobucket where I used to post large size images and then let blogger downsize them for my blog. However, I was never happy with the crappy quality of the downsize job blogger did. So I upload the images on photopucket in the exact size I want them for my articles here on my blog.

To accommodate the wishes of my readers my wife came up with a simple solution. “Othmar why don’t you provide a link to my wildlife gallery on DeviantArt every time you post one of my pictures on your blog. What a brilliant idea and why didn’t I think of that myself?!

So here is the link to the Artemis Graphic and Design wildlife gallery. If you are not in a rush you may just as well have a look at all the other galleries available, including her art gallery. There are only something like 1000 images and graphic art pieces. Oh, before I forget. The gallery is called 12monthsOFwinter, it’s all long story behind that name, but you’re on the right place. Enjoy!

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Oh Deer a Bear

On Saturday evening when I came home from my fishing trip (more about that soon to come) my wife wanted to go out to the Alouette river, just five minutes from our home, where she had previously scouted for a particularly beautiful scenic photograph she had in mind. We drove the short distance down to the river and as we approached a four way stop from out of the blue and without warning a blacktail doe walked onto the road ahead of us. Within a couple of seconds two spike bucks followed her. The traffic came to a complete stand still on all for stop signs as the deer, completely oblivious and not one bit intimidated by the traffic meandered back and forth over the roads to nibble here and there.

The doe was the first to walk leisurely on the roadside toward the four way stop and then across the intersection into the front lawn of a house. Again the two spikes followed her. Meanwhile my wife, who was driving and had pulled onto the shoulder of the road, began happily snapping pictures at high speed thru the window of the car. Once all three deer settled in the front lawn and began to browse on the variety of flowers on offer the traffic cautiously started to move again. Around here people are used to seeing deer and gladly grant them right of way. The deer in turn are so used to people and traffic that they behave more like livestock than wild game.

My wife, never one to pass opportunities up wherever they may present themselves, turned the car around and followed the deer. Parking the car in the driveway of the house gave her a good view of the deer browsing in the garden like they belonged there. Finally the deer moved into the woodlot behind the house and my wife turned the car to head to the river just around the corner.

She parked the car on the roadside, gathered her camera bag from the back seat and left the car. I was only a couple of seconds behind her when I heard her shouting, sounding scared and exited: “Honey, a bear!” while at the same time yanking the camera up and snapping away. By the time I arrived at the scene I could just see the bear’s fat backside disappearing in the bush. Since we are not people who give up quickly we decided to stick around for a bit in the hope that the bear would return. We had reason to believe that he would show up again since when my wife disturbed him he was standing in the river obviously looking for a meal.

My wife took several pictures of the scenic shot that she had in mid all along while I was watching out for the bear. It was perhaps twenty minutes or so later when the bear showed up again. He was indeed hungry as he went straight to the river where he turned a big stone over and followed that with a swipe of his front paw that landed a big pink salmon in his mouth. The fish was about the size of the one that I had caught that morning in the Fraser River. My wife grew more curious and brave as she walked back and forth on the bank of the river to photograph the bear from different angles. At one point she could get quite close to him and he didn’t appear to mind having people observe him from such close proximity even while eating his dinner.

Of course all this attracted passers-by; some looked and went on about their business without saying much. Others cautiously looked down the riverbank and when the bear moved or looked up they got scared. A few horse riders passed by and we thought it might be wise to advise them that a bear was just a few yards below on the riverbank. But the riders seed not to be concerned at all, in fact one of them was saying as nonchalantly as if she would talk about a dog: “Yes we saw him just on the other side a while ago in someone’s garden. There are plenty of bears around here.” I had to smile when I heard that, thinking of the animal rights groups that keep claiming that bears are an endangered species and yet here we are not five minutes away from the town center with deer walking around on the streets eating berries and cultivated plants and bears fishing in the river and all in broad daylight. Similar bear stories can be heard in the news almost daily. Bears are not an uncommon sight in North Vancouver or many of the cities on the north side of the Fraser and are even known to show up on the south side of it in Abbotsford.

It was one of the best Saturdays we have had in a long time. In the morning I went fishing then came home and witnessed wildlife encounters with my wife practically in our backyard. It can’t get much better than this. Or can it? This exceptionally good weekend started on Friday afternoon. When I came home from work my wife announced that Corel, one of the best known graphic software applications producers approached my wife with an offer to provide her artwork to be used by the company to advertise their software. My wife uses Corel almost exclusively for all her artwork and photography editing and is of course extremely happy to have her artwork acknowledged in this way. Now this is very good news and I am very proud of my wife and if you visit her website you will agree with me that she is a very talented graphic artist and photographer and that is why Corel contacted her, they are impressed by her art.

Photographs provided by Heidi Kohler of Artemis Graphics & Design

Larger Wildlife images, containing also the ones shown here can be viewed in Artemis Graphics and Design Wildlife Gallery at Deviant Art

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