What Good Can Come From Legislating Fair Chase?
December 20, 2007
By Tom Remington
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A nasty and heated debate has already begun in North Dakota over a proposed ballot initiative that is intended to put an end to high-fence hunting. The Attorney Generals office has yet to come up with a title for the initiative and the petition, which will need 12,844 legal signatures, hasn’t received a single signature yet. Read more
A Deer Population Under Control Is A Healthy Thing
December 20, 2007
By Tom Remington
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There is a reason why state fish and game management sets goals for attaining and/or maintaining an ideal whitetail deer population. Some people, hunters and non-hunters alike, want to see deer everywhere. This is not practical nor is it healthy for deer and humans.
Most states, depending upon several factors, try to manage a deer population of somewhere around 15-20 +/- deer per square mile. Read more
Chasing ‘Gators
December 20, 2007
By A. Sayward Lamb
My first encounters with alligators happened in the summer of 1973, when my wife and I traveled from Maine to South Carolina to visit our niece Pam and her husband Daniel. Daniel worked for the Federal Wildlife Service and was stationed on Bulls Island, which is part of the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. The island is located a few miles off the South Carolina coast and is accessible only by boat from a place called Moore’s Landing. Read more
Taking a Stand
December 20, 2007
By Tom Remington
“Taking a stand” is an expression that is used in hunting in perhaps two different ways. For many hunters, it means going to your favorite location where you have erected your tree stand or blind and getting into it to wait for the trophy buck to come along. For others, including many Maine hunters, taking a stand means to locate yourself in a specific area and wait for that trophy deer to come by. That specific area is determined by occurrences that are taking place in the area you are hunting. Let me give you some examples of what I mean.
Morning breaks and you are headed for one of your favorite hunting spots and on the way in, you notice other hunters in the area. You think about it a minute and realize that often when this happens you know exactly where deer like to cross when pushed by other hunters. Another example may be when you are hunting with one, two or three other hunters and once you have discussed what each of the hunters in your party are going to do, you decide to go sit or wait at one of your favorite places you know deer travel through when hunted by other hunters.
Whatever the reasons are that you might decide to “take a stand”, you are not equipped with portable blind or tree stand – there is just you, your rifle, a survival pack and perhaps a “hot seat” to sit on. There are proper ways or should I say less intrusive ways to take a stand that will increase your chances at seeing or bagging a deer.
Deer, and especially the trophy bucks, are not stupid animals. They are much like us in that they are creatures of habit and what seems to have worked for them once or twice, their instincts will direct them in that same manner more often than not. You as a hunter need to learn what those habits are and apply them to your hunting strategies.
Here are a few examples of how deer might react under certain circumstances. When you hunt an area often, it shouldn’t take you too long to learn the layout of the land – deer know this layout better than you do. Remember what transpires each and every time you hunt in a particular section. If deer get pushed or jumped, where do the go? What direction were you traveling, what was the weather, what direction was the wind blowing and what was the time of day, just to name a few. This may seem like a lot of information to process but it is what makes hunting enjoyable. It is part of the chase.
By learning these bits of information, you can determine better how to hunt that area. If you know that under most circumstances when deer are pushed out of that area from hunting pressure, the deer escape via a well hidden ravine on the west end of the land it would only seem logical that that would be a good location to take a stand and wait.
Over time, you will discover some very rewarding places to take a stand. Perhaps that place will be a favorite knoll, ravine, crossing on an old logging road, ledge, swamp, field or next to an apple orchard. Wherever it is, once you get there, don’t ruin a good opportunity by not knowing how to take a stand.
I repeat, deer are not stupid nor are they blind. One of the biggest mistakes inexperienced hunters make in taking a stand is to remain in the open. Many times I have suggested to a fellow hunter to go to a particular spot on an old woods road and wait. When I arrive at that point, I find them standing smack dab in the middle of the road.
When taking a stand, you want to be able to see well enough to spot a deer and that can be accomplished without standing in the middle of the wide open area. Look around for a minute or two when you get there. You should have knowledge of what direction you think a deer might come and where the favorite crossing spot is. Assess the wind direction, sun, etc. and from that determine in what general area you should be, i.e.. put the wind in your face and sun to your back if you can.
Once you’ve determined in what general area you should take a stand, now is the time to find the best strategic spot available to you. Is there a bit of a rise or knoll that would give you a better view? If so, use it. Find a place on that rise where you can camouflage yourself with the natural surroundings. If you are standing alone in the open and a deer comes by, chances are that deer may not recognize you as a human and danger but it will more than likely determine that you are something that doesn’t belong there. The deer will turn and go in another direction and you are left looking like a fool.
Put your back to a clump of trees or underbrush. If you can put some small bushes in front of you – enough to help blend you into the surroundings without impeding your site to shoot. If you are going to sit down, find the spot and clean it up. Make it so any small movement on your part doesn’t create noise – deer have acute hearing. Sit in a manner that is conducive to making shooting more easily accomplished. What I mean by this is simple. The spot you are watching for deer is more than likely relatively small. Hopefully small enough so that you don’t have to keep turning your head from side to side – that’s too much movement. Sit so you can see and you can raise your rifle easily when needed.
If you opt to literally stand when you take your stand, again find a place where you are best camouflaged and clean the area where you will stand. Move the dry leaves and branches from under foot. The result should be a moist dirt area free of crackling leaves and twigs. Any movement by you of your feet should be silent. Stand in a position that affords you the best sight and when necessary you can raise your rifle to shoot with the least amount of movement – deer will spot the slightest amount of movement or noise on your part.
The bottom line is to use common sense. This is actually a game of hide and seek. The better you can hide yourself and at the same time making every effort to keep a clear vision for yourself, you are increasing your chances at success.
One last thing that I will add to this is to have patience. I know in my early years of hunting, I would take a stand somewhere and run out of patience. I would decide to move to another spot or get antsy and start shifting positions only to hear a deer running off in the other direction. The hunter with the most patience will in the end be the one that brings home the deer while your buddies, family and other hunters will be wondering why you and not them.
Happy hunting.
Keeping Turkey Decoys in Shape and Other Decoy Tips
December 20, 2007
By Pat Rayta
I have found that after a lot of use and having been put away for the winter, most collapsible turkey decoys lose their form. To bring them back into shape, I take a wire coat hanger, and pull it into the shape of a diamond. Fold the hook back into the center of the coat hanger. Insert this diamond into the decoy. This allows the foam to return back to its original shape, and the decoys can also be used this way in the field.
To prevent holes from being made in your decoy from the hook, a little bit of electrical tape will cover the point fine.
The extra bit of weight in the field also helps hold the decoys down upon your stakes better on those windy spring days like we get here in Vermont.
This is also a great way to dry your wet decoys: simply bend the hook down out of the cavity. The decoy can now be hung up to dry, upside down.
Pat Rayta
Tree Stand Tips
December 20, 2007
By Robert Lane
Bob Lane is a Licensed Master Maine Guide and photographer. He has also guided Caribou Hunters and Fishermen on float trips in Southwest Alaska.
July’s warm, sunny weather doesn’t provide much incentive to think about deer hunting to outdoorsmen who are trolling for deep swimming salmon and togue, whipping out the fly line during the drake hatch, or pursuing numerous other activities in the Maine woods this time of year.
This time of year I find myself occupied with trying to decide where I’m going to fish during the week and on the weekends, and trying to fit the kayaking and photography in to boot. Being an avid outdoorsman is no easy task. With the expanded archery season opening in September, rifle season for the elusive whitetail opening in November, now is the time to begin preparation to increase your odds for a successful hunting season. Read more
Florida Residents Cause Bear To Be Killed
December 20, 2007
In a subdivision of Orlando, Florida where it is reported that some residents had been feeding a bear, police, under the direction of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, ended up killing a bear after it was Tasered twice. This is another one of those cases where it ends up being a lose – lose situation for authorities.
We all hear stories everyday of bears coming into neighborhoods looking for food. More times than not garbage cans are their target as they put off some pretty attractive aromas for a bear. If people don’t properly care for their garbage, they can have unwanted visitors, not just bears.
We also know that often times people move into the suburbs and do what they can to draw wildlife into their back yards, even to the point of putting out food for the animals. According to one report in the Orlando Sentinel, someone in the Tivoli Woods neighborhood was feeding this particular bear.
When the bear appeared in the area on Tuesday, some frightened neighbors called 911. Orlando police responded and followed the instructions of the FFWCC in dealing with the bear. Once again, according to this report in the Orlando Sentinel, this is how officers dealt with the bear.
Residents in the 4700 block of Walnut Ridge Drive complicated efforts to shoo away the bear by refusing police requests to go inside their homes.
“We also observed dozens of citizens standing on their front lawns taking pictures of the animal,” wrote Officer Frank Sikos of broadcasting pleas over his patrol car’s public address system to avoid the bear. “Many of the residents did not comply.”
For 45 minutes, police followed the bear blaring sirens and flashing emergency lights as it wandered house to house along Walnut Ridge Drive, Oak Crest Road, Tarflower Lane and Spindletree Lane.
When the bear returned to Walnut Ridge Drive, it walked into an open garage where residents Jennielyn Rodrigues, Sovet Navarez, William Hodge and Gary Navarez were sitting at a table.
“All four began screaming as the bear charged at them,” the report states. “Hodge threw a chair at the bear as (they) attempted to enter their home.”
One of the police officers got ready to use his shotgun to shoot the bear but feared hitting the people. The bear wandered outside again, where police officers tried to encourage it to escape harm by heading into nearby woods.
“The bear did not comply and instead turned toward us,” Sikos wrote. “The bear was more interested in entering the garbage cans around the homes than avoiding the officers on the scene.”
The animal came within a car length of Sikos and took two more strides despite his efforts to scare it away.
“I did not want to use deadly force on the animal,” he wrote. “I deployed my department-issued Taser, striking the bear in the torso.”
The 50,000 volts of electricity slowed the bear long enough for officers to lasso one leg and its neck with animal-catch poles. That didn’t do much other than upset it.
“The bear became agitated and we moved from yard to yard as the bear tired. However, the bear had spurts of energy,” Sikos wrote of being pulled around the neighborhood.
Another officer zapped the animal a second time with a Taser and a second leg was harnessed with a catch pole, according to reports.
“We again moved from yard to yard as the bear wrestled with us,” Sikos wrote. “We then observed the bear appeared to have passed out. A short time later, we determined the animal had passed away.”
It certainly appears to me that these officers did everything in their power to avoid killing the bear. In all honesty, I think in most cases the bear would have been dispatched much sooner than as happened in this case. The efforts of the Orlando police and the instructions of FFWCC should be commended but instead many of the same residents who refused to go inside as instructed by police, are complaining that the bear didn’t have to be killed. Their ignorance and uncooperative attitudes actually contributed to bear’s death.
The officers went out of their way to avoid having to kill the bear. Even when they Tasered the bear for the second time, that ended up killing the bear, it was still not their intention to cause death.
The job of the Orlando police department is to protect the citizens of the Tivoli Woods. Had the people gone inside and stayed there, the police could have observed the bear until it returned to the woods. Police Sgt. Jones tells reporters the same thing.
“We couldn’t leave until the people went inside and the bear went into the woods. As long as the people remained there we had to treat the bear as a threat,” she said. “Everybody loves animals and they’re cute, but they’re not cute if they maul somebody.”
If you don’t want to see a bear killed needlessly, as some would say this one was, then take care of your garbage and when authorities do show up in your neighborhood to respond to a bear encounter, cooperate with them and perhaps you can save the life of bear.
Tom Remington
Get In Line For That Alligator Hunting Permit
December 20, 2007
If you’re in Florida, get in a long line for a chance at one of 4,500 alligator hunting permits being issued. Today is the first day you can get one. Each permit entitles the holder to 2 gators. The season begins August 15th and runs through November 1st.
There is a bit of a catch but not one that seems to deter too many gator hunters. The cost for a permit for Florida residents is $271.50. If you’re a non-resident, dig deep to come up with $1,000.
Hunters can apply for permits by visiting the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Web site at www.MyFWC.com/license or by calling 1-888-HUNT FLORIDA (486-8356).
Tom Remington
Doing A Thing Called The Crocodile Rock (Alligator Actually)
December 20, 2007
I keep telling my fellow bloggers that there is a time and a place for everything and sometimes it is good just to keep things on the light side. In case you haven’t figured it out yet, hunting news can be a bit on the slow side this time of year so this is often when Steven, my son and business partner, and I explore new ideas and work toward improving on some of the ones we have.
Earlier this spring I went on an outing with Chief Photographer Milt Inman and my brother to a place called Medard Park. Medard Park is just east of the city of Tampa, Florida and comprises a good amount of land along with an interconnected system of small lakes and ponds. Most of these bodies of water contain some great bass, catfish and all the alligators a fellow could want and not want.
While we were there, we noticed several alligators most of which were basking in the afternoon sun. Usually during the daytime, alligators will remain beached somewhere or mostly submerged while keeping their body temperature regulated. They are not very active.
So you can imagine the surprise I had when this one alligator surfaced about 75 yards from the elevated walkway, thank God, that I was on and began swimming right toward us and some fisherman who were trying to catch some fish from the same boardwalk.
I played around with the video and cut out a section of it and put a little “appropriate” music to it for your viewing pleasure. In case you might be wondering, the accompanied music was performed by yours truly.
Tom Remington
AFL-CIO Backs Bill To Allow Guns In Cars In Workplace
December 20, 2007
In a bit of an unusual occurrence, the major labor union AFL-CIO has sided with the National Rifle Association is support of a bill in Florida that would put a stop to business owners banning such things as guns from their automobiles at workplaces.
The Tampa Tribune has the whole story.
Tom Remington


