Tuesday, February 18, 2025

How'd They Get Here? or This Must Be the Place!

 

We know, or think we know some things about how birds navigate using magnetic fields and possibly smells. But the magnetic signals are really weak, and birds without it still manage. Scent we're not sure. Here's a fascinating listen into another possible way migratory birds might navigate. I have to say that I like the idea of calibrating their system with the sunset ... I think Andrew Huberman might agree. 


https://open.spotify.com/episode/7gk2iSvGmVw0tLnCrCR1zA?si=27a1d51b86d0457a

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

No Grousing About Late Winter in Ohio

The following is an excerpt of an article originally published in the Dayton Daily News, Springfield News Sun, and Journal News. 

Author's late GSP Jurgen pauses on a late winter run.


Some of my favorite annual outings used to be the tail end of Ohio’s October-to-February Ruffed Grouse season. I’ve seen reports that hunter success was greatest in October and February in that stretch. This hunter’s efforts were not an additive factor to grouse mortality.

A snowy weekday outing stands out in memory. We left with an empty game bag, but an exhausted dog and a satisfied hunter.

That’s not an available option anymore. Beginning from a peak in the 1980s, Ohio’s Ruffed Grouse jumped the track on the bust of a 10-year boom-bust cycle and never boomed again. In 2009, the month of February was dropped from the season. Later changes were made eliminating most of January.

This most recent season was confined to one month — from Nov. 1 to Dec. 1 — with a daily limit of 1 bird, in select counties only. There were questions if there should be a season at all. In this way, the Ruffed Grouse has followed a very similar path in Ohio to the Bobwhite Quail.

Read the complete article here: Ignore the cold weather and get outside: It’s Cottontail rabbit season and fish runs in the local rivers start soon

Resources Cited in Article:




Wednesday, February 5, 2025

Housing Crisis Hits Ohio wildlife

The following is an excerpt from an article published in the Dayton Daily News.


Many of our favorite wildlife characters are facing challenges finding accommodations. Habitat is the defining factor in their existence, from food to shelter to reproduction. Like our housing, habitat is at a premium and wildlife faces less-than-optimal options.

I’ll skip a political discussion, but for wildlife habitat diversity is great and monocultures are not. You can recognize good habitat because it enables creatures to find food and shelter with a reasonable effort.

The time is now to help area wildlife going into the spring. You can read the complete article here:

Housing Crisis Hits Ohio Wildlife

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Tulla the GSP with a Dummy Retrieve

Tullamore Do with the retrieving dummy. Making the transition from balls to dummy without a hitch.

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

New Dogs, Old Dogs, Same Tricks

My daughter recently joined the GSP family with Tullamore Dew (Tulla) found locally in Ohio but with a sire out of Willowcreek Kennels in Minnesota. Jurgen being too hard to pet when he's a couple of states away. If you've followed here, you've seen Jurgen in various stages stacked on rocks around the yard. This was their first time semi-free outside. Tulla has him all day on retrieving thrown balls for sure.

Friday, November 16, 2018

County Lines - Preserving Habitat and a Way of Life

Great piece from a non-hunter, Renee Wilde on WYSO.org about some of the attraction of the upland.: "When I first asked Ray if I could tag along with him today, I really wasn’t sure what to expect. Although I don’t ever see myself picking up a gun, I have to admit that hiking around in the woods and fields, watching the dogs doing something that they were bred to do, and they obviously loved, was actually, really fun." Next step, getting the author connected with Pheasants Forever. You can read and hear the story here: Bird Dogging A Perfect Fit For Sesquicentennial Farm