Showing posts with label wrong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wrong. Show all posts

Friday, July 13, 2012

Protect equipment and permissions: Ask First - Always

Lock up all tree stands & other hunting equipment to prevent theft
photo courtesy Dave Richey Outdoors ©2012

My ultimate goal is to be ready for bow season by Sept. 1, and August 15 is even better. That gives my area 30-45 days to settle down before I start hunting.

My fall food plots are planted, and there is a fairly lush green growth. We need a rain bad, and last week the plots got a nourishing drink. Even more rain would be good to keep it growing.

What we don’t need is any more 90-degree weather. It’s time some cooler weather and some more rain. Nice late-summer rains would be nice.

We need some nice steady rains but don’t need a gulley washer

Deer are moving through the food plots, and after tomorrow, there will be nothing left to do but bide our time. Some long-distance scouting can be done but I don’t plan to spend any time walking through my hunting areas.

We’ve got deer spotted, trees stands are up, our coops are almost all ready, and all I need to do is spend a few hours putting chicken wire around the bottom of the coops to prevent porcupines. skunks and other critters from chewing holes in the wood.

Two ground blinds are completely checked out and set in place. The fencing around the bottom has been put in place, and the coops are locked. Are locks necessary? To my way of thinking, I’m beginning to believe my father was right.

“Locks keep honest people honest,” he used to say. “If you don’t lock things up, and exercise certain precautions, some people who are given an opportunity to steal something, someone will take advantage of it.”

I’ve had people take advantage of me when they thought that leaving coops unlocked was an open invitation to hunt my land or steal tree stands. So, in the past I’ve had people climb into my coops to hunt when I can’t get away for one reason or another. I’d find the coop doors unlatched and blowing in the breeze, a larger shooting window cut more to their liking, and a chair stolen.

Another time I spent two days fixing up tree stands. I went to one stand, and some fool had stolen the bottom two sections of the ladder stand. The seat and foot rest was still attached to the tree with a good chain and a heavy-duty lock.

This was an out-and-out theft

Now I stand the sections together, duct tape the chain to the ladder, and lock it. The cost of two good padlocks for the ladder section and another lock and chain for the seat is certainly cheaper than replacing a complete tree stand.

I once had an excellent tree stand, and located in a great spot where two deer trails merged. The deer always came from behind me and on my left side to present a perfect broadside or quartering away shot. The person who would occasionally sneak into my tree stand always left his signature behind.

He was left-handed. He would try to reposition the stand so it was easier for a left-hander to shoot from. The stand was in a cedar tree, and I had pine boughs conveniently placed to break up my outline. Those boughs were tied with twine to suit my needs.

I went to this tree early one morning, and waded into the cedar swamp and hid. My presence kept the deer from moving that morning, and right about daylight I heard brush cracking as the poacher walked to the tree.

I let him set there, and both of us could hear deer giving the area a wide berth. I snuck up behind the stand, and pulled out the two lower ladder sections. The guy looked down at me, and yelled, “What do you think you’re doing?”

I said I knew what I was doing. I was making it difficult for him to get down

He was in my tree, I was on the ground with two ladder sections, and he’s whining about how he’s going to get down. So we had us a little heart-to-heart chat.

“You’ve been hunting my stand illegally for a week or more, and we’re going to settle this now. You either agree to quit sneaking in on my leased property, and stay away from this area, or I’ll call the cops right now. It’s a long ways to the ground, and too far to jump, so either agree to stay away or I’ll press charges and wait down here until the police arrive.”

“You’ll still be up the tree when the police come. Then we will have a chat with the landowner. What’s it going to be?”

He quickly agreed that he wouldn’t come back. OK, I said “Toss me your wallet, with your driver’s license and hunting license so  I can make a few notes in case I find you’ve been hunting my spot in the future.”

He whined and carried on but I convinced him the two ladder sections wouldn’t be replaced until he complied. I added that while he was at it, he could lower down his bow on my haul rope.

I asked him if he was the one who was hunting out of my blinds. He said he just hunted the tree stand, which was obviously difficult to deny. I took notes, learned that he lived nearby, and I then threatened to walk away and leave him there.

Make it hard on trespassers and poachers. They get no sympathy from me

He gave in, complied with all my wishes, and I asked if he was going to be aggressive when he came down. I didn’t want to fight him, but I wanted him to realize the errors of his ways.

“No, no more hassles,” he said.  “I’ll leave and won’t be back.”

So that episode ended peacefully, but I’d learned my lesson as well. Ladders and tree stands are now chained together, and to chained to the tree, and I never lost anything since. Land leased for hunting carries much the same laws as ownership, and I’ve had all of trespassers and thieves to last me a lifetime.

If they don’t respond to reason, I get on the phone and call the local conservation officer or the Sheriff’s Department, and let them do their job. They get no second chances with me.

Posted via email from Dave Richey Outdoors

Monday, August 29, 2011

Hunches Don’t Always Pay Off

My hunch was wrong when I missed a chance at this buck.


I've hunted my land for so many years that I know where the travel routes of big bucks are found, and sometimes I play a hunch and it doesn't pay off. Here's just one example from last year.

I had a couple of buddies visiting one day last season, and knew the bucks should be moving during the firearm and rutting season. I put each hunter in a great spot for  a rifle hunting in one of my nearby hunting areas, and we had moved a new coop onto a high piece of rolling ground in the middle of one of my big open fields.

I drove to it with several stops along the way. I had a Bushnell range-finder, and stopped at a dozen places where I knew bucks would cross the field. One location was 301 yards, another was 311, one was 266 yards, and all the others averaged 200 to 275 yards.

Someone asked if I would write down the yardage at each location, and I told them they are stored in my head. If I spot a buck at a certain location, I know it is 311 yards. My rifle is sighted in to be dead-on at 300 yards, and it wears a quality Swarovski variable power scope and I've had a bunch of practice shooting at long distances with it.

If they had their rifles sighted in for long-range shots (mine is usually three inches high at 100 yards, which puts me dead-on at 275 yards), they would be in business. If they hadn’t spent the time sighting in, they would be having problems.

The new coop had two major problems, and both needed fixing. One was that it was a hunting coop with windows on three sides, and those windows had screens on them. A hunting coop doesn't need window screens for any kind of hunting. It’s not a house; it’s a hunting blind. The guy that built the blind for me had not paid attention to my directions.

We quickly removed the screens. I tried to call a buddy to come and cut a door window in the coop for me. I couldn't raise him so we went looking, and found him finishing up a repair on another coop.

"I'm going to sit in my new blind tonight and see if I can spot that big buck," I told him. "I need a hurry-up window cut in the door, and a piece of Plexiglas installed."

He drilled four holes, connected the dots with a battery-operated saw, and the window was cut. He'll install the Plexiglas tomorrow, and the coop would be ready for me whenever it was needed.

After sitting there that night with my binoculars I thought that perhaps I'd need a hunting partner. There are so many areas from that coop where a 300-yard shot would be possible, but the major problem is being able to keep watch in all four directions at the same time.

That was last year, and a couple of those bucks seen at long range are still prowling around in that portion of Leelanau County. I seen several bucks bucks in a couple of places where I hunt but not the one I’ve been looking for, and quite a number of does were seen. The animals are freely feeding throughout the field, and were seen to all points on the compass.

I’ve learned that it’s unwise to try to cover too much real estate with just one person. One may be sitting in an enclosed coop, but if their head is on a constant swivels trying to cover 360 degrees, it’s easy to be spotted by deer. It’s also easy to miss seeing that one big buck you’re looking for.

We'll get the Plexiglas installed tomorrow for the door window, and I'll probably set there again to see what is moving through the area. While I was playing my hunch, and hoping to see the big buck move across the field, three nice young bucks were shot by hunters at places I'd picked for them to try.

One was a massive 11-pointer, another was a nice 8-point, and one hunter shot a thin but wide-beamed 6-pointer on that hunt last year. From the looks of things, this season’s hunting should be pretty good.

I put in two green fields for this year, and I sat out last night and watched for deer as part of my pre-season scouting regimen. It was one of those nights when the bucks seem to take the night off but the does and fawns were out in abundance. I’m trying to determine just how many antler-less are on my property, and I’ll probably play another hunch this year.

Over many years of playing hunches, listening to my gut feelings, and taking an occasional flier on a guess, I’ve learned some valuable lessons. Some of those gut feeling turn out to be wrong, but at other times, they can pay off..

One just has to take their chances, and try not to get too upset when they don’t pay off.