Friday, February 24, 2012

Too Many Deer - at Least One Too Many

When the final numbers came in for the Ohio 2011/12 deer season down about 20,000 in total, I didn't think much of it. After all, the weather was awful the first couple of days of deer gun season. No matter what the weather, you know some people would be out, enough to certainly move the deer around some. There's no mulligans for opening day. There's just one. After that the deer know what's up and everything changes. But then a deer ran in front of my daughter in my car and I wish there's been at least one more deer taken. And of course as my daughter (who was fine) exclaimed "and it ran off so we don't event get to keep it."

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

New Bird Species Found ... In a Drawer

Just when I thought I was bad at filing and keeping track of projects, this Field and Stream blog post made me feel slightly better. At the same time I feel bad for the scientist involved. Worse for the Bryan’s Shearwater that might not be any more.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Ohio Sportsman Survey - Ohio Deer Rifle

What's the difference between .44 magnum revolver and .44 lever-action rifle? One is a legal weapon for hunting deer in Ohio during the firearms season and the rifle isn't. The Buckeye Firearms Association has set out to change this. However you feel about it, go take the survey now.
I'm personally for it. As a kid I often wondered about slipping a .41 magnum cartridge into my .410. Of course I never did, but there was little doubt in my mind that the straight-walled .41 magnum would be a more effective load than a .410 slug. And the thought of carrying a snappy lever-action rifle to a deer stand seems much more like the traditional deer hunting that the rest of the country knows rather than lugging the 870. Even if it's not a 30/30.
From a safety standpoint it doesn't seem as though these cartridges pose a dramatic increase in range, which was the reason for the original shotgun and muzzleloader restriction. Indiana has already made the change, the only state bordering Ohio that had a rifle ban. As long as the ODNR can keep up with and enforce, I am for it.
Photo from www.gunblast.com

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Feels Right - Franchi

The only Franchi I've ever held is the AL-48. But I love this commercial. It stops me every time. It captures a lot of favorite moments for me. If (when) I'm in the market for a double they will sure get a look.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Sundance West Eva Diva; Oct 15, 1998 - Dec. 10, 2011

Our first bird dog made every single outing an adventure, and in a good way. Every single time. We couldn't have asked for more, although as a first-timer in Ohio with limited funds, I'm sure we never saw anywhere near her full potential. But you'd never know it to watch her. NAVHDA NA Prize II (a story in itself). She always hunted hard no matter what and was always happily ready to go. 






Right out of the box, she had the goods.

Sundance German Shorthair Pointers


Eva's litter:

Doc vd Westwind MH x Sundance Elishaba whelped 10/15/98 (6 males, 5 females)

Earned NAVHDA Breeders Award. What a group. 


Sire - Doc vd Westwind 


Dam - Sundance Elishaba 
NA Prize I "Liz"

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Colorado Elk Hunting

Following up on the roadless rule being upheld, Colorado created an excellent big game brochure. Obviously too late to plan a hunt for 2011 for eastern hunters. But as one of the few states with over the counter elk tags, it could be a great option for the do it yourself hunter.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Hope for Roadless Areas

Field and Stream reports that "On October 20th the U.S. Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated the 2001 Roadless Area Conservation Rule." This is great news for all average outdoorsmen everywhere. While the focus of the debate was extensively in the west, areas affected stretched from coast to coast. You can see a map of roadless areas here. I'd love to hunt elk out west and a public land do-it-yourself hunt is probably the only way I could ever make it happen. The idea that I could go there, put the miles in and have success, or at least a truly wild experience, gives me hope. Much more likely is an NE deer hunt. The way these guys track deer
has always been appealing. So thanks U.S. Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, for hope.