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jperch

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Posts posted by jperch

  1. There is more involved than ice thickness when it comes to ice integrity.  New, black ice is a lot stronger than end of the season gray, candled ice.  I have seen a foot of old ice that was not safe at all and that disappeared in a day.  If new to the sport I suggest finding a local who can give advice, have basic safety gear (picks and a throw rope at minimum), a change of dry clothes back in the truck (driving home in your undergarments is embarassing) and use a spud.  There are lots of videos online about how to correctly use a spud to check ice conditions.  There is always some element of danger of course but it can be minimized.

  2. I never much liked hunting in the rain.  I wear glasses, that is one issue.  Bowhunting in a moderate to heavy rain makes tracking problematic.  I would do it on opening day of gun season.  These days I can pick my days as I can hunt near home after work.  I do believe bucks are more likely to be on the move on dark, gray days before a storm.

  3. I was a grad student at Penn State and was allowed to hunt on one of their large farms.  At the time they were conducting research on cost effective ways to keep deer out of large ag fields.  The basic scenario was that the ag fields were in the valley and there was large, quite hilly forested land bordering the fields.  Deer generally moves down to the fields in the evening and spent the daytime on the hills. The hills were quite steep and rocky.  I talked with one of the researchers and I knew one of the farmers.  As I recall very high fences were only somewhat effective.  Some deer jumped, some got under in low spots, it appeared they did some digging!  I do remember them saying that deer were unlikely to jump a fence if they could not see what was on the other side.  There were tons of deer, this was before Gary Alt's  deer management program was initiated.  (At the time Mr Alt was in charge of the states' black bear management program, I went to a couple talks he gave.) They also had noise cannons, various scents, etc.  The problem is nothing worked for very long, deer are very adaptable and it's hard to keep them out of corn and beans.  On our small farm we had a horse pasture with electric tape.  Sometimes the deer would get excited and run right through it.  They could, and often did, just jump over it.  It contained the horses fairly well.

  4. I recall that there was a study done in Pennsylvania, I think by the PGC, that said that black bears there take as many fawns as coyotes.  I don't think we have anywhere near the bear numbers that Pennsylvania does but they are clearly expanding their range.  I often hear and read that killing coyotes on the farm will have no impact on coyote numbers and could even somehow increase their numbers.  My reply is that all I can say for sure is THAT coyote I shot won't be eating any more fawns or turkeys.  Also, I can say that it is possible to change coyote behavior.  Decades ago "the boss" (my GF) told me not to shoot the coyotes as they were beautiful.  I agree they are and have their place.  But then a coyote took her favorite cat.  After that the rules changed.  Coyotes no longer come close to the house during daytime and don't walk out in the open like they used to.  There is still a lot of coyotes, they are just more cautious.

    • Like 2
  5. We used to take two big bolts with a large nut, carefully wad a bunch of caps into the nut and gently screw the bolts in.  Then we'd drop it on a hard surface, and step back.  Definitely not a safe thing to do, like a lot of stupid things we did as kids.

    • Like 1
  6. I believe there are states where suppressors are legal for hunting.  Does it require some special federal permit?  Anyway, I doubt it would have an impact on turkey poachers.  The stories I heard years ago about turkey poaching did not involve firearms.  Geez, poaching turkeys, who would do that anyways?

  7. 4 hours ago, Nytracker said:

    One thing I do miss is the gobbling fools. Last 2 birds I killed never gobbled after fly down . Back in the 80s and 90s you couldn't shut them up. Only real common denominator is increase in coyotes. 

    In my area there has always been a lot of coyotes.  The agricultural situation and woods have not changed much.  There is a new predator in my area, fischers.  Turkey numbers are WAY down in my area (Northern Oswego and Cayuga Counties) compared to 30 years ago and yes, they sure don't like to talk as much.

    • Like 1
  8. I saw this happen decades ago (around 1980) in central Pa.  The oak trees in areas around Penn State (for example, Nittany Mountain) were devoid of leaves for a couple of years.  It seems like the moths move on and the woods recover.  I remember that walking in the woods when the catepillars were feeding was disgusting, their poop made it sound like it was raining.

  9. I hope nobody is really going to take medical advice from anyone other than a medical professional.  There are several tick borne diseases and some of them don't require the tick to be attached for a long period of time.  As others have said, prevention is the best defense.  Permethrin flat out works.  Time to dig out my turkey hunting duds. 

    • Like 3
  10. On a fishing trip to Quebec there was a bear hanging in camp when we arrived.  We were given some to try and I recall that it was stringy as mentioned but tasted ok.  I have only seen one bear in NY while deer hunting.  I would not shoot one because I have heard too many stories about parasites.  One of those stories came from a processor in Dansville who got infected from handling the carcass.  He must have transferred something to his mouth by accident.  We actually had a bear on the Oswego State campus a few years ago, it was dumpster diving.  The wildlife has changed quite a bit in my lifetime.

    • Like 1
  11. I went hunting for a package of venison loin in my chest freezer earlier today and  I bagged one!  It was trying to hide beneath a bag of burger but I was not fooled.

    I might go out once for bunnies locally.  I used to love hunting for them and partridge.  At 68 jumping up and down on brushpiles is tough.  I count it as a successful outing if I get a shot at one.  They sure are tasty.

    • Like 3
  12. I used to hunt sea ducks in Lake Ontario off Rochester from a small aluminum boat.  It was amazing, hundreds of thousands of them.  You could sometimes attract them by waving a boat cushion, we used plastic gallon jugs as decoys sometimes.  They were feeding on crabs, like we would use for bass bait.  They would be just stuffed with them.  They must be able to dive to significant depths.  I thought they were fair table fare, kinda beefy as I recall.  I don't see those massive rafts of ducks these days.  I suspect the zebra mussels have reduced the crawdad population.  That is just my observation as a SCUBA diver.

    • Like 1
  13. 41 minutes ago, Doc said:

    Anybody here remember back when posted signs were relatively rare? I recall that back in the early 60's you could walk miles before running into any posted signs. Much of the land was still farmed, and the farmers didn't have a lot of time or resources to be walking their perimeter nailing up posted signs.....So they didn't.

    Absolutely.  Fifty (or so) years ago I would go rabbit hunting with my uncles who had packs of beagle up in the Henderson Harbor area and farther north.  Nothing was posted as I recall.  I don't know how you could run beagles now other than on state land.  Beagles don't respect property lines and sometimes would take off for a long period of time, perhaps chasing a snowshoe rabbit.

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