Deer season cuts a sign of the times

SUN

To give you a sense of how bad things have gotten in the woods of eastern ON and western QC, I have spent the last two weeks worrying that the white-tailed deer season where I hunt back home would be closed completely this year. 

It was one scary thought, let me tell you! 

A hunting buddy from QC’s Laurentians called me up explaining that the rumour was the Ministry had plans to close Zone 9 completely this year – an area we have hunted for the past 30 years! 

Could this be possible, I thought? The last time the deer season was closed up north was back in the mid-1970’s when deer numbers were extremely low, but apparently that is where we are today. 

In much of the Outaouais-region and the Laurentians, deer harvest numbers have plummeted by 50% and more over the past two seasons. Even parts of the Outaouais which had enjoyed very high deer densities since the early 1990’s has seen a drop in numbers and possible season changes. 

I certainly breathed a sigh of relief this am when a message arrived from wildlife biologist Monique Boulet. She explained that our Zone would, in fact, be open for hunting this year, but that the season would be shortened by at least two days, and the antlerless deer tag draw would either be severely cut or removed altogether. 

Deer seasons are being cut back in other parts of the province too like Gaspe, which has also seen huge number declines over the past two years. 

Deersnow

My feeling is we will see more of this for eastern ON as well..as Central Canada tries to rebuild the deer herd after two years of steep decline. 

 Outdoorsguy

Ottawa SUN and John's Marina BIG fish contest

 JeffMUSKIE

This is no April Fools joke!!

Thanks to John’s Marina and Ottawa SUN staffer (and avid sportsman) Mark Williamson, the Ottawa SUN and John’s Marina Braggin Board Contest enters its third year.

Send in a picture of your Braggin’ Board Fish and the story of how you got it in (keep it short) and you could win a boat and trailer package courtesy of John’s Marina, Princecraft Boats and the Ottawa Sun.

To enter, email your entry to [email protected] with the subject of “Braggin’ Board” and remember to include your contact information.

http://www.ottawasun.com/contests/2010/03/08/13158231.html

Good luck..and may the best BIG fish story win!!

Outdoorsguy

Ducks Unlimited Ottawa Fundraising dinner

It’s that time of year once again for the Ottawa Ducks Unlimited Canada Conservation Dinner!

The annual fundraising dinner brings together partners in conservation to celebrate a new spring, wetland conservation and to benefit waterfowl, wildlife and our water resources.

DUCanada

The Ottawa Chapter’s 30th annual fundraising dinner will be held at the St. Anthony’s Banquet Hall on Thursday, April 8th.  Join prominent members of the Ottawa community for an evening of fine dining, auctions, raffles and camaraderie in support of habitat conservation in Canada.

With your generous support, the Ottawa Chapter has raised close to $500,000 to support the securing of over 906,000 acres of wetlands in Ontario alone!  With the backing of our Ottawa community partners, we plan to sustain and increase our funding of DUC activities this year.

Your support will assist the following local Ducks Unlimited projects:

Joint work with the South Nation Conservation Authority to expand wild rice production to improve habitat for waterfowl, wildlife and fish while improving water quality and controlling the spread of non-native plant species.

7,600 Ontario youth involved in DUC’s Greenwing program and 2,161 Ontario landowners working in partnership with Ducks Unlimited Canada.

Continued rehabilitation of 10,900 acres wetlands in the Marlborough Forest south of Ottawa, part of an ongoing partnership with Giant Tiger Stores Ltd.

Your partnership with Ducks Unlimited will also support the Wetlands for Tomorrow Campaign.  The goal of $500 million is within reach; we can make it happen!  This campaign is aimed at habitat conservation, scientific research, public policy and education initiatives spearheaded by DUC.  

Partnerships with Wildlife Habitat Canada and the Ontario government are the result of the efforts of this campaign. You can become a partner in conservation by purchasing a ticket or making a donation to the Ottawa chapter. 

waterfowl

To inquire further about this event or DUC programs in general, contact Michael McCaugherty at (613) 276-3851, [email protected] or visit our website at www.ducks.ca.

Spring hunt 'bruin' across the river

blackbear

In a few short weeks, black bear hunters will be traveling across the river in pursuit of North America’s most mysterious and feared big-game animal.

When the Ontario government announced the end of its’ spring black bear hunt over nine years ago, it sparked controversy and outrage – the effects of which still shudder today like an earthquake after-shock.

Ontario hunters resigned themselves to the fact that bear hunting would – for all intents and purposes – remain a sport of the fall. The province of Quebec on the other hand, not only maintained its spring bear season; many regions have reintroduced the autumn bear hunt for bow, muzzle-loader, and in some regions rifle.

Regardless of where you hunt Ursus Americana this spring, successful hunters are aware that these creatures have perhaps the keenest sense of smell of any predator alive, and that the use of cover scent and hunting from a tree-stand, is of utmost importance.

The QC bear hunt this spring gets under way May 15th – a day that bear enthusiasts from both sides of the river look forward to greatly.

For a rundown on seasons, bag limits and regulations pertaining to the non-resident:

http://www.mrnf.gouv.qc.ca/english/publications/online/wildlife/hunting-regulations/index.asp

Outdoorsguy

Strangest things found in the Great Outdoors

 

Laurentians

Avid sportsmen have all spent long hours travelling the backwoods trails over the years and have, undoubtedly, stumbled across some weird and whacky things along the way..it just comes with spending lots of time afield,  I suppose. 

But what is the weirdest thing you have ever found while out hunting or fishing? I must admit this is a topic I borrowed from a chat forum, but is a subject I find extremely interesting, being the natural treasure hunter that I am.. 

So, here are just a handfull of the things I have come across, over the years, while spending time in the Great Outdoors .. 

-Pair of binoculars 

-A weather balloon 

-A foam mattress with a bunch of playboy magazines on it. 

-Several marijuana operations –even some with plants still in it! 

-In Northern QC, a friend and I found a string of balloons with an advertising sign, which had broken away from a car dealership in Central Michigan! 

-Two ATV’s covered over with brush. 

-Several canoes and boats 

-Abandoned camping equipment. 

-Two way radios 

These are just a few of the oddities I can recall off the top of my head.. 

 So, what about you? What have you found out there over the years? 

Drop me a line! 

Outdoorsguy

Quebec poachers nabbed in Lanark County

Here is the latest Law enforcement news from the MNR:

Non-Residents Fined $6,500 For Hunting Violations

NEWS

 March 25, 2010

Three Quebec men have been fined a total of $6,500 and received a combined nine years of hunting suspensions after pleading guilty to hunting-related violations.

Jonathan Blais, of La Patrie, was fined $1,500 and suspended from hunting in Ontario for five years for careless hunting. He was fined a further $1,250 for discharging a firearm from a roadway and $1,250 for making a false statement to a conservation officer.

Stephane Blais, of La Patrie, was fined $1,500 and suspended from hunting in Ontario for three years for careless hunting. He was also fined $500 for making a false statement to a conservation officer.

Jean Francois Lachance, of La Patrie, was fined $500 and received a one-year suspension of his hunting licence for making a false statement to a conservation officer.

Court heard that on December 1, 2008, several residents of Herron Mills, in the Township of Lanark Highlands, noticed a pickup truck driving slowly by a group of deer near their house.  Shortly after dark, the defendants were seen shooting at the deer from the same truck.  A deer was later found killed and left to spoil.  The residents that saw this activity occur were able to identify the vehicle and its licence plate.  Conservation officers investigated and, through witness statements and forensic evidence, were able to determine what had happened and to identify the individuals involved.

Justice of the Peace Clayton McKechnie heard the case in the Ontario Court of Justice, Perth on March 9, 2010.

To report a natural resources violation, call 1-877-TIPS-MNR (847-7667) toll-free any time or contact the Kemptville District office at 613-258-8204 during regular business hours. You can also call Crime stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477). 

Buck Mountain Trophy Whitetails

Below is an excerpt from my feature article entitled “Buck Mountain Trophy Whitetails” which appears in the current issue of Outdoor Sportsman Magazine..

This ‘father & son’ piece is a personal one for me and a story I thought many of you hunters out there could relate to:

Buck Mountain Trophy Whitetails – Outdoor Sportsman (April/May issue)

The pursuit of white-tailed deer, for me, has always been a family affair; as I hail from a long line of accomplished Morrison deer hunters. My grandfather Alfred, I am told, was one of the best in the business. He would regularly guide hunters from Montreal and the United States on his homestead Quebec’s Laurentian mountains and at his hunt camp nestled at the foot of (appropriately named) ‘Buck Mountain’.

Although I never got the opportunity to know granddad personally, my father has shared enough of his deer hunting tales and prowess; I feel I know him well and probably even take after the man in many ways.

My father Rathwell certainly took after his old man, I’m happy to say, and began sharing his ‘inherited’ love of deer hunting with me at the tender age of 13. The year was 1980 when I was first immersed in the mountain deer hunt lifestyle- much like a Border collie pup surrounded in a camp full of experienced old dogs!

It was intimidating, to say the least, but I paid close attention and observed how my father and uncles pursued these wily old mountain deer – whitetails often described as too difficult to hunt.

I learned quickly and even managed to bag a buck on the very first season. It was a fine 8-pointer which I harvested with a single shot from granddad’s trusty old Winchester 30-30 Model 94. The same rifle Dad had taken his first buck with many years earlier and granddad before him. As if destiny the mountain family tradition was born!

As year’s passed, I continued to study the inner-workings of Quebec’s trophy mountain deer, while still hunting out of my grandfather’s buck mountain camp. In 1983 I faced my first beginner’s mistake, when an enormous 240 pound 12-pointer strolled out to me at a scant 70 feet. The buck was so huge and dark in colour I mistook it for a moose, and never even raised my rifle. Fortunately my uncle – Alfred junior – was there to show me how it’s done.

I learned a good lesson from that missed opportunity, and came back the following year to capitalize on a wide 11-point buck that dressed 213-pounds. With my confidence building, my family continued to take trophy-sized whitetail bucks at granddad’s camp. But we never talked about it much in an attempt to keep our good fortune a secret.

fatherson1

By 1996, 16 years of hunting with my father culminated in my ultimate moment of family mountain magic, when a one-of-a-kind 8.5 year-old whitetail made the mistake of getting too close. The beautiful 13-point animal I harvested that year called ‘old toothless’ became a BTR Provincial record at 141 4/8”, and remains Quebec’s number 1 in the Typical category.

Old toothless, by the way, was not my father’s first brush with record book history; as the province’s All-time Number 1 whitetail – known as the Hotel Buck – was chased out by Dad and taken by his friend Arthur Dobie in 1959. My father actually displayed the mount for many years at his hotel in Arundel, Quebec. That magnificent animal netted a whopping 207 5/8” Boone & Crockett – a record which still stands today; some 50 years later.

Hotelbuck1959

The family deer hunting tradition continued for my Dad and I through the new millennium and who would have thought his personal best deer would come after nearly 60 years of climbing the hills. In 2003, he bagged a beautiful 218 pound 11-pointer with an impressive 22” spread – a magnificent animal we are all extremely proud of. After that year, my father and I fell into what one might describe as a big buck rut, a condition which lasted 5 years.

Although we had the opportunity to take several smaller animals in that time, we chose to hold-out for something more noteworthy, something to properly rekindle the spark of that old mountain family tradition, and a run-of-the-mill whitetail just would not do.

Rathwellbuck2003

After nearly 30 years of hunting together, and five long years of passing-up on lesser bucks, my Dad and I finally came together again in a big way. The mountain family magic had returned for one very special day we spent together in the fabled mountains of Quebec with our good friend Jim Bindon.

This year we headed to the nearby woods of Fairmont Kenauk in Montebello; where the stands of mature hardwoods and mountain peaks beckon. While pursuing the elusive whitetail trophy, setting is often considered universal; but as my father and I have discovered over the years, there’s just something unique about the mountains and crisp, cool northern air to set the stage for the another family deer hunt.

Kenauk

Each year we try our best to recreate the mountain family tradition and magic of taking big animals together. Although we’re not always successful as far as a trophy bucks go, after 3 decades of climbing the majestic Laurentian Mountains side-by-side, I’d say we have the magic part already sewn up!

 

For the rest of the story, pick up a copy of Outdoor Sportsman Magazine available at finer news stands across Canada!

Outdoorsguy

Fairmont Kenauk early season trout opener

Kenaukchalet1

One of my favourite fishing haunts is the Fairmont Kenauk in Montebello. Besides being one of the oldest hunting and fishing preserves in North America, Kenauk has some of the best quality trout fishing and accommodations anywhere in the world!

And since it is completely private and self-managed, Kenauk has the privilege of stretching the seasons a bit. This year – with the unseasonably warm weather and early thaw – the Montebello-area trout fishery will be opening its trout lakes on April 16th – the earliest season opener in the club’s history, and welcomed news for trouters looking for a jump on the season.

Me with a nice looking Kenauk brook trout:

Kenauktrout

 

With their own full functioning trout hatchery, Kenauk keeps all their lakes stocked with spunky, well-managed strains of brook trout, rainbow trout, brown trout and splake. 

My girls checking out the fish at the hatchery:

Kenaukhatchery

 

I have stayed in many different chalets over the years and I must say they are all top notch. Fairmont Kenauk boasts both quality and seclusion…as most chalets are located on their own private lake.

A typical Kenauk Chalet:

 Kenaukchalet

 

Thanks to the ongoing efforts of General Manager Bill Nowell and his staff, Fairmont Kenauk remains one of the top trout destinations around. Not only is Bill GM, he is also manager of recreation and fisheries, a biologist and an accomplished fly-fisherman in his own right.

 The best part about Kenauk for me, above all else, is the fact that this magnificent slice of heaven is a mere 40 minutes from my home and has everything a trout fishing enthusiast could ever want.

Perhaps I’ll see you there this spring at one of the many hot trout lakes! 

 For the latest ice conditions and a list of the lakes and chalets available for the April 16th opening, please call (819) 423-5832, or check them out on the web: http://www.fairmont.com/kenauk  

Outdoorsguy

POLAR BEAR PROPOSAL SHOT DOWN

polar bear

A recent proposal by the United States, which would spell the end of the polar bear hunt in the far north was shot down in a recent CITES vote.

The proposal was rejected by a majority of Governments including Canada with 62 votes against, 48 in favour and 11 abstentions. The majority of the govenments rejected the proposal over concerns it would have a negative impact on indigenous communities that rely on the Polar Bear for their livelihood.  It was found that northern trade practices do not pose a significant threat to the animals.

A disappointed United States emphasised that even a relatively small commercial trade in polar bears in the north could pose considerable pressure to an already stressed population.

I, for one, would have been greatly disappointed had the motion not been shot down.

Any thoughts?

Outdoorsguy

From Boys to Men of Heart: Hunting as Rite of Passage

You have probably heard the expression “hunters don’t mug little old ladies”, well it turns out there really is something to that!

youthhunter

In his book ‘From Boys to Men of Heart: Hunting as Rite of Passage’ award-winning author Dr. Randall L. Eaton puts his years of studying conservation and hunting to print, looking at how hunting can have a positive influence on young men in today’s society.

Is hunting good for bad kids? Does it teach violence or does it teach empathy and compassion? Would it be a more peaceful world if more kids grew up hunting? These are some of the questions addressed in a recent book entitled From Boys to Men of Heart: Hunting as Rite of Passage.

The book’s award-winning author is Randall L. Eaton, Ph.D., a behavioral scientist with an international reputation in wildlife conservation who has been studying hunting for 35 years. While producing “The Sacred Hunt” in the mid-1990s, a documentary that received 11 awards, Eaton interviewed scores of recreational and Native American hunters all of whom used the word “respect” to describe how they feel about animals they hunt.

That prompted Eaton to conduct questionnaire surveys on 2,500 mature hunters who described their attitude toward animals they hunt as, “respect, admiration and reverence.” Over 80% of these recreational hunters claimed they prayed for the animals they killed or gave thanks to God.

Eaton’s survey also asked hunters what life event most opened their hearts and engendered compassion in them. Choices included death of a loved one, death of a beloved pet, becoming a parent, teaching young people and taking the life of an animal. Women hunters overwhelmingly chose “becoming a parent,” but most of the men chose “taking the life of an animal.”  Eaton said, “These results indicate the basic polarity of human life: woman are adapted to bring life into the world, but men are adapted to take life to support life.”

The same survey asked respondents to choose those universal virtues they learned from from hunting. The top three choices were, “inner peace, patience and humility.”  Eaton believes that inner peace and humility are the foundation of religious and spiritual traditions across time and space.

 Eaton insists that hunting is instinctive at least in boys who around the world start throwing rocks between the age of 4 and 5. His survey indicated over 90% of the men spontaneously had killed a small animal before the age of 10, compared to less than 20% of the female hunters. 

“These are the same men who claimed that hunting had done more to open their hearts than any other life experience. Typically the boy cries as 8-year old Jimmy Carter did when he threw a rock and killed a robin. I consider it no mere coincidence that Jimmy Carter and Nelson Mandela both won the Nobel Peace Prize and both are avid hunters,” Eaton said.

The book interviews Dr. Wade Brackenbury, who for 13 years led groups of delinquent boys into the wilderness for two weeks where they had to survive off what they could forage. Brackenbury is convinced that it was hunting small animals for food that had the greatest transformative influence. Surveys conducted a year later indicated that 85% of the boys had not got into trouble after their survival experience.

A best-selling authority on how to raise boys, Michael Gurian, also is interviewed in Eaton’s book. He agrees that hunting does teach males compassion, and that it would be a more peaceful world if more boys hunted.

The book presents compelling evidence from several disciplines that adolescent males need rites of passage to become responsible adults. Eaton says that the original rite of passage was hunting because it proved a young adult male could provide and qualify for manhood and marriage.

“Without transformative rites of passage that open their hearts and connect them to nature and society males may become destructive and dangerous.  Untempered masculinity is a major factor behind juvenile crime and gangs,” he said. 

Inspired by Eaton’s book, Dr. Karl Milner launched H.E.F.T.Y, Hunter Education for Troubled Youth, in Wyoming where the courts are sending juveniles to his program. The kids are engaged in conservation work on private lands where eventually they will be able to hunt.

 Endorsed by the Wyoming Fish and Game Department,  Eaton and Milner expect H.E.F.T.Y. to grow across the continent. “Dr. Eaton and I see the program  helping thousands of wayward youth. It also will encourage more parents to get their kids outdoors,” Milner said. “Hunting and fishing are good for bad kids because they are good for all kids,” Eaton added.

To get Eaton’s newest production, “Why Hunting Is Good for Bad Kids,” visit his website at www.randalleaton.com.

To learn more about H.E.F.T.Y. visit: www.hefty4kids.org.

For more information contact Dr. Randall Eaton at 513-244-2826 or email reaton@eoni.

com. Contact Dr. Karl Milner at 307-299-2084 or email [email protected].