Monday, October 29, 2007

Blog Network Update

© By Othmar Vohringer

Since I run a small network of hunting related blogs I thought it might be a good idea to post periodically a blog network update so that readers of this blog can see what information is available on my other blogs.

Whitetail Deer Passion

On October 27 I posted The first 2007 Monster Bucks. It’s a short news item highlighting the early archery season monster buck (35 points) taken by Wisconsin bowhunter Casey Heine. The second early season trophy buck has been arrowed by non other than Jay Gregory of the Wild Outdoors TV Show, which he hosts together with his charming wife and fellow bowhunter Tammi.

This has given me the idea to stage a little early archery season success story contest for my Whitetail Deer Passion blog readers. The readers can send a photo and short story to me and become eligible to win one of the coveted Othmar Vohringer Outdoors caps. What can I say the first submission has been sent in today by Richard Burt and can be read at the Whitetail Deer Passion blog now. The second submission is also in but only a picture no story yet, so I am waiting on it. It seems that this contests is popular and besides it is nice to hear from other hunters how they got an early season buck.

Wild Turkey Fever

Features a product update from the Heirloom Turkey Call company. Brian Warner the operator and owner of Heirloom came up with an ingenious innovation to turn any el-cheepo-run-of-the-mill box and slate type call into a high quality call at very little expense. You’ll have to hoop over to Wild Turkey Fever to read all about it.

My Stand is the blog where I publish my bi-weekly column that now is also carried by Red Ash Outdoors Web Hunting Magazine. The new column will highlight the economic aspect of hunting and what good this economic power does in regard for wildlife and habitat conservation. The article will prove that hunters invest more time, money and effort than any other organization or individual person for the greater good of all.

Last but by no means least, the promised article about how I became an avid bowhunter and all the trials and tribulations to get there will shortly be published here on Outdoors with Othmar Vohringer. I hope by reading this new article other aspiring bowhunters can avoid some of the mistakes I made that almost made me give it all up.

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Wednesday, October 17, 2007

What Blog Statistics Can Tell You.

© By Othmar Vohringer

Yesterday evening I took an evening off, meaning I did not spend two to three hours working and writing on the computer as usual. Well not quite, I did post two new articles, one on Whitetail Deer Passion about public land hunting strategies that have worked time and time again for me, and another article with fall turkey hunting strategies on the Wild Turkey Fever blog. Both articles feature a video clip to prove the point I am making in the article. I had the articles written a few days ahead so it was a simple copy/ paste affair.

For ones I spent time with my family and with my new rifle. I went shooting last Sunday and then the rifle went back to the gunsmith for a few minor customization changes before I shot some more on the range (more about that soon to come).

Since I had a bit time left I thought that it would be neat to explore my web statistic account and check out all the features it offers. You would be surprised to learn what information I can pull from the statistics about my visitors. One feature I came across is really neat. It tells me on hand of a map where my visitors come from and I thought it might interest you to too.

Outdoors with Othmar Vohringer receives visitor’s form around the world from as far as China and India. No big surprise here since this blog covers a lot of different topics that appeal to many different interest groups and not only hunters and fishers.

However, were it does get quite interesting is on Whitetail Deer Passion and Wild Turkey Fever

Most visitors on Whitetail Deer Passion come from America and Canada, but not from across the country. The bulk of the visitors are concentrated east of the Mississippi. A much smaller concentration of visitors comes from the west coast, California and British Columbia. In the middle of the map is a wide empty space. These are the prairie states of American and Canadia. I found that highly interesting. Could it be that most of my articles deal with public land hunting and the fact that east of the Mississippi are more hunters and deer than in the rest of America and Canada?

On the other hand the visitors on the Wild turkey Fever blog come from all over America and the west coast of Canada. To me that looks more obvious. British Columbia has a turkey hunting season for two years now and slowly it catches on with the hunters, hence the many visitors from my home province of hunters looking for turkey hunting information. It also shows the huge success of the turkey preservation program. Today the American wild turkey can be found across North America, even in states where they never had turkeys.

To me this discovery was quite helpful in that I now know what topic of seminars I have to promote in a particular area. I definitely will pay more attention in the future to my home province in promoting my turkey hunting seminars.


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Saturday, October 13, 2007

Hunters Poll

© By Othmar Vohringer

A few weeks ago I posted two polls on this blog. The poll “What’s your favorite hunting weapon?” had so far 65 votes and the results are somewhat surprising to me. Here are the results as of today.
  • Compound Bow 23% (15 votes)
  • Long Bow 8% (5 votes)
  • Crossbow 8% (5 votes)
  • Rifle 20% (13 votes)
  • Shotgun 25% (16 votes)
  • Muzzleloader 12% (8 votes)
  • Black Rifle (AR-15) 5% (3 votes)
The big surprise for me is that only 3 readers clicked the Black Rifle (AR-15) as their favorite hunting weapon. Remember this is the gun that Jim Zumbo cost his career. For those that do not remember all the controversy about Jim Zumbo and his comment about the AR-15 assault rifles used as a deer hunting weapon can all about it here.

On the second poll on this blog I asked the readers, “What do you hunt?” As expected the majority of the 118 votes went to “Big Game” hunting. Here are the results.
  • Big Game 21% (25 votes)
  • Small Game 15% (18 votes)
  • Exotic Game 3% (4 votes)
  • Varmints 5% (6 votes)
  • Predators 13% (15 votes)
  • Waterfowl 8% (10 votes)
  • Upland Birds 11% (13 votes)
  • Turkey 15% (18 votes)
  • Migratory Birds 8% (9 votes)
For me the only small surprise in this poll is that Waterfowl got less votes than Upland Birds. I always have been under the impression that waterfowl is more popular than upland bird hunting. But that is why I make this polls because it gives me a very good idea what the readers of this blog like to do and in turn I will be better able to provide information on the interests.

Thank you to everybody that took part in the pool and please keep the votes coming.

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Wednesday, October 10, 2007

When Politic Goes Bonkers over Honkers

© By Othmar Vohringer

I just got a hold of a news story that I have to share with you. It’s so ridiculous that at first I didn’t know or I shall cry or laugh my head off about it. But then I just left it by shaking my head in utter disbelieve about how downright stupid government bureaucrats can be. Sometimes I wonder if these people could pour water out of a boot with the instructions written on the heel.

Here I leave you with the article.

U.S. hunters forced to dump birds at border
By Chris Niskanen
Article Source: TwinCities.com

More than 4,000 wild game birds were snatched from American hunters as they headed home last weekend from Saskatchewan, Canada. Critics say it was an overreaction by U.S. officials to an outbreak of avian flu on a chicken farm in the province.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture misinterpreted its rules banning Saskatchewan poultry, forcing U.S. customs agents to confiscate coolers filled with game birds at border crossings during the peak of hunting season.
Mike Borchert, 70, of Le Sueur, Minn., and four friends were returning from a week of hunting in Saskatchewan on Friday afternoon when agents confiscated their 215 waterfowl at a North Dakota crossing.
"We asked the U.S. custom agents where they were taking them, and they said, 'To the landfill,' '' Borchert said. "We were dumbstruck."
On Thursday, the USDA's Animal Plant Health Inspection Service banned all imports of poultry and "unprocessed avian products" from Saskatchewan after an outbreak of avian influenza H7N3 on a commercial chicken farm near Regina.
U.S. customs agents were told the ban included hunter-killed birds, and for at least three days, hunters were forced to give up birds at border crossings in Montana, North Dakota and Minnesota.
Hunters also had their birds confiscated at Canada airports; some reportedly opted to dump them in garbage cans before reaching border crossings.
Late Saturday night, USDA officials rescinded the order on hunter-killed birds after reviewing their protocols, but not before the damage was done.
Customs agents in North Dakota and Minnesota confiscated about 4,100 birds from hunters in 88 vehicles, with each vehicle containing three or four hunters, said Mike Milne, a customs spokesman in Seattle. All those birds are being taken to landfills.
"We've had to order extra (garbage) trucks,'' he said.
Most birds were confiscated at the Portal and Pembina crossings in North Dakota, but birds were also confiscated at Warroad, Minn., and crossings in Montana, Milne said.
A wildlife ecology professor who was hunting in Saskatchewan at the time called the USDA ban ridiculous and a waste of valuable wild game.
"Biologically, it makes no sense whatsoever,'' said Michael Chamberlain, a professor at Louisiana State University. "They were saying you can't transport a hunter-killed bird across the border, when millions of birds are migrating across the border already?"

I couldn’t agree more with the quote of Michael Chamberlain. It sums the situation perfectly up.

Read rest of article here

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Monday, October 08, 2007

Blog Buzz #7

© By Othmar Vohringer

Time for another of my popular blog buzz editions. This has been very likely one of the most difficult picks I ever had to make, over the past two weeks the outdoor blog sphere was literally buzzing with note worthy articles.

I’ll start of with a new blog that I came across about a week or so ago. The NYbowhunter features a superb article on how to improve your trophy picture taking. This is a must read for everybody looking to take better pictures of their game kills and fish you land.

Steve Remington from Skinny Moose Media asks Are You Drying Up On Ideas and then quickly follows with an array of solutions on finding new ideas and topics to write about on your blog.

My blogging friend Bryan from the DeerPhD blog has a series of articles going under “Buck Fever that are sure to improve your hunting ability and success. He writes as both, an accomplished hunter and psychologist. Brilliant stuff!

Darrell from the Alpha Trilogy Blog gives us a wonderful day by day account of his Colorado Elk Hunt. Go to the bottom of the article where you will find the links to his other elk hunting journal entries.


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Sunday, October 07, 2007

A Guideline on Outdoor Writing

© By Othmar Vohringer

My blogging friend Phillip wrote, what I consider the best article I have read in a very long time, on The Hog Blog.

Words to live by - and how we use them is an outstanding article about the fact that our blogs are read by audience of no-hunters too. The question is what words should we use to describe facts of hunting such as shooting a game animal. Should we be politically correct by choosing less graphic words than “killing” or “blood trail” in order as not to offend the non-hunters that read our blogs? Or should we be honest and write things as they are and how we feel about the event we describe.

The discussion is not new, in fact Phillip picked the idea up on the DeerPhD blog written by Bryan, another good blogging friend of mine. Bryan has posted several posts about the subject and encouraged a lively discussion of different views.

In turn I encourage all my fellow outdoor bloggers to visit the two above mentioned blogs and read what they have to say. It certainly contained valuable information for me and helped me in the struggle between my personal voice and words and the feelings of the non-hunting visitors to my blogs.

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Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Blog Post of the Month

© By Othmar Vohringer

Today I visited the HuntingLife.com blog almost got a shock when I read the following post:

    HuntingLife Blog Poster of the Month goes to Othmar Vohringer
    The business of setting up HuntingLife.com has taken its toll on me the last few months and I have not been able to keep up on my reading of all of the great blogs out there but over the last week I have been slowly catching up on some of my reading and I came across some great posts but this one particular post really hit me as one of the greatest I have read in the last several months of reading blogs. Othmar Vohringer is a dedicated outdoors writer and his blog is excellent. He is soon to be a hunting education instructor and is a founding member of the OBS.

Kevin refers to the article The Science of Hunting and The Good Old Days. I am still speechless about the attention this article generated. All I can say is a humble thank you. I am thrilled that to many readers could identify with what I wrote. I also would like to extend my sincere thanks to Tom Remington from the Black Bear Blog who picked the article up and wrote a very kind review. And then there is all the fellow bloggers that commented on my blog about the article too. Thank you to (in the order of comments) Bryan from the deerPhD, Rex from the Deer Camp Blog, Kristine from theHunt Smart, Think Safety Blog, Arthur from the Simply Outdoors Blog, Andy from the Andy & Julie Outdoors Blog (The only husband and wife team hunting blog I know in existence), Matt from the Bright Idea Outdoors Blog, Kevin (see link above HuntingLife.com), the Suburban Bushwhacker, Deerslayer from the Hunting Wild Game / A Way of Life, Marc from Nybowhunter.com Blog (The new kid on the blogging block and a bowhunting nut like me.), Phillip from the Hog Blog.

Phew, that almost felt like an Oscar Award nomination speech. But there is a reason why I posted all these links here. All the blogs listed here, and I am sure there are many more that I do not know of, provide their readers with excellent information on all things hunting, fishing and the outdoors. To view all the blogs of note scroll down the side bar to my blogroll, they are all listed there.

You all have inspired me and as a result I will tell you in a future article how I became an avid bowhunter and then almost gave it up again, and what made me fall in love with bowhunting again.

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Monday, October 01, 2007

The Science of Hunting and The Good Old Days

© By Othmar Vohringer

The recent controversy surrounding the Scent-Lok company and their supposed promise that their carbon lined apparel is 100% capable of eliminating human odor got me thinking about how hunting is today compared to the time of our fathers and grandfathers.

Today hunting is all about science and modern technology. Hunting has moved from a simple outdoor activity to a space age technology driven race to sell hunting-success promising products. From the technologically advanced compound bow that can shoot carbon arrows at lightening speeds to the image stabilizing, high precision rifle scope; it’s all here to help us kill that elusive monster buck and the moment we purchase one of the high tech products it is outdated by even better high tech products.

Technology and science does not stop with products that guarantee us 100% hunting success. One of the newer fashions in the world of QDM is ‘growing’ better and bigger deer with the purpose, obviously, of growing larger antlers. Scientifically designed and mixed seeds will make sure that the deer in your area will all grow into record book trophies. No bull, it has been scientifically proven to work! And then there is, of course, the plethora of products that promise to take care of human odor, the age-old problem hunters face when dealing with the fine nosed whitetail deer.

Clothing lined with carbon, soaps, shampoos or laundry detergent all have one thing in common: they promise instant success that has been scientifically proven. Or how about the all-synthetic, better than nature, deer attractant lures? Doe and buck urine that never saw the inside of a bladder but which science will have you know is a chemical mix that is 100% better than the real stuff. If we are to believe the advertising dominating every hunting magazine and tv screen, we hunters have nothing to do but sit and wait for all the gadgets and gizmos to bring a trophy buck our way.

Let’s stop right here for a minute and make a leap back in time.

I fondly remember my childhood, sharing hunting camps with my father and his hunting friends in the days where we didn’t have all that science available and the gadgets derived from that science. We wore lots of wool clothing, not camouflaged, which was washed with any old laundry detergent available. Game calls were not invented yet. There were a few old men that could produce a perfectly pitched grunt with the mouth and a blade of grass. I admired these men. The only deer scent we had available was the urine of harvested deer. Obtaining doe urine was usually left to an older hunter. He would head into the woods and about half an hour later he would return with a still steaming doe bladder full of urine. How did he do that in such a short time without the aid of scientifically proven products?

What I remember really well was that the game poll on any given trip was quickly filled to capacity with deer and other critters- often to the breaking point.
I honesty cannot remember a time where any hunter in our camp went home empty handed. What I do remember is that besides deer a lot of small game and birds where brought to the camp as a welcome addition to the otherwise boring camp meals.

















How did they do it? Nobody had high-powered magnum rifles with synthetic stocks and stainless steel barrels firing composite ammunition topped with scopes . Most game was shot with the trusted old .30-06 and open iron sights. The next popular deer hunting gun was a shotgun loaded with buckshot and the odd lever action rifle. Game was taken at very short ranges compared with the ranges we take game today. Back then we rarely saw a rifle topped with a scope; that was something only wealthy hunters could afford to buy.

And yet miraculously, back then hunters were very successful. Back then we probably killed more game than the average hunter does today. Another puzzling aspect to this hunter success rate was the fact that the deer population then was nowhere close to what it is today. Today’s deer numbers are a million stronger than they were forty years ago, yet we harvest less deer today than when I was a child. How come?

Sure these days bag limits are not as generous as they were forty years ago. Back then nobody ever heard of wildlife management and most certainly not of Quality Deer Management. Back then most hunters went to the woods each fall to provide nutritious sustenance for the families.

So how did they do it?

Here is what I think has happened. Today we have come to rely too much on modern products. I lost count of how many times I heard something like: “Since I started shooting with bow ‘x’ I kill more deer.” or “The deer saw me because I didn’t wear the right camouflage.” And even this one: “I missed the buck because the scent lure I was using was no good- it spooked the buck.” Rarely if ever do I hear somebody say. “I messed it up because I didn’t know better”.

The hunters of yore had no high tech products to blame for mess-ups. They only had to blame themselves. These hunters knew that their hunting success was in direct relation to how much they knew about the animals they pursued, the lay of the land and the weather conditions. A good hunter was also a good woodsman and animal biologist. I remember listening to my father and the older hunters with an intense thirst for wisdom. Their knowledge of animals and habitat was simply stunning to me. Some of the hunters could tell by looking at broken grass, leaves, or twigs what direction the deer was headed.

I have learned a lot about the woods, plants and animals from my father and the old men of the hunting camp. Today I sometimes have to force myself to recall the wisdom of those men. Each time I do so my hunting success improves dramatically. We have come to rely so much on gadgets, gizmos and expert advice that we have forgotten how to think, how to observe, and how to register it all and then put that information together in our noggins to formulate a hunting strategy. It seems we can’t function anymore without the aid of modern technology and if success fails us we’re quickly ready to blame it on the technology and not where the blame should really go - ourselves. In no way do I attempt to diminish modern science and technology but these things should be viewed as useful aids and not as do-all and be-all necessities. Once all is said and done hunting success boils down to one thing: us! We make it or break it- not our guns and not our camouflage or any other product.

The most modern rifle will not shoot a deer for you if you don’t have the time or inclination to practice and become a proficient rifleman. Reading hunting magazines with the latest tactics will not make you a better hunter; spending time in the field observing and studying will. The best scent control product will not work if you do not hunt with the wind in your face. The best scientifically written book on scouting will not reveal where you have to hang the stand if you do not go out and scout the area thoroughly and figure out how the deer travel and what time of the season they use an area and why. It’s all about YOU!


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