Friday, October 28, 2011

Do you know that you can brake the law when you call your buddy in the middle of a hunt?

This a very interesting article about the use of cellphones when hunting.

2011 Firearms Deer Hunting Season: Calling all deer hunters.

Cellphones, electronics have a place in the field, but can easily be misused

Posted: October 28, 2011 - 6:07pm
Informative websites are accessible for hunters who have Internet access on their cellphones. And, of course, there are cellphone apps for hunters, too. Among the new deer hunting apps this year is “Deer Diary, the App for Hunters.”Among the offerings: satellite map locations and current weather data (sky condition, temperature, wind direction/ speed).
Gary Drotts can see it now. Or maybe it’s sometime in the future.
“It will get cheap enough with (trail) cameras where you could have four to five monitors in your deer stand going at one time,” Drotts, DNR wildlife manager in Brainerd, said of the impact of technology on deer hunting. “You could sit there and sleep until one (of the monitors) beeps when a deer comes in and then just get up and shoot the deer.”
Whether Drotts was being futuristic to make a point remains to be seen. But there’s no doubt that electronics and technology have changed the deer hunting experience in recent years, creating potential challenges for Drotts and those who will monitor Saturday’s Minnesota firearms deer hunting opener.
“They (deer) haven’t adapted at all, but we keep inventing better, faster tools to harvest deer,” Drotts said. “They (technological advances) do probably increase the harvest rates some. If so, we have to look at that and decide if we have to change anything. Is it a problem today or tomorrow? Is it a problem now? Probably not. But with time ....”
Years ago, about the only electronics in the field for deer hunts were two-way radios — walkie-talkies — which, of course, have given way to cellphones. And in a big way — a majority of the 500,000 or so hunters in the field this season will likely have cellphones with them.
And that’s OK, Drotts said.
“You can carry them (in the field) and they’re a good safety device,” he said.
Tim Collette, DNR conservation officer for the Pequot Lakes area, agreed that cellphones have their place in the field in these modern-day hunts. But misuses remain a concern.
“It isn’t even the calling back and forth or the texting. The main thing people need to remember is that it’s fine to text or call another hunter and say ‘I want to go in. It’s cold.’ Or ‘I need help dragging this deer out.” But where they cross the line is you can’t use electronics to aid in the taking of big game. You can’t say ‘A deer is coming in your direction.’ Or ‘We’re making a drive. Get ready.’ That’s aiding and abetting. But with the prominence of texting, people don’t even stop and think about it. They automatically do it.
“That’s crossing the line. But it’s getting more and more common where I’m interviewing someone for some reason and this person knew this deer was coming. That’s where we say ‘Did you get a text on this. Can I look at your phone. I have (checked hunters’ phones for texts). But I have not had a case where I’ve caught anybody. I’ve had ones where they admitted ‘I texted and didn’t even think of it. But it wasn’t where they actually took a deer. So I give a lot of verbal warnings that you can’t do that, it’s a violation to do that.”
Hunters using phones to aid in the taking of deer face fines and other penalties.
“Part of hunting is to preserve the traditions of the hunt and how you frame fair chase,” Drotts said. “It’s obvious to them (cellphone users) that it’s a useful tool (for hunting) and they don’t hardly think about it anymore (using cellphones in hunts).”
But beside safety reasons — using the cellphone to call in case of an emergency or using cellphone GPS devices to find one’s way — there are other obvious advantages to such electronics. Minnesota hunters may register their deer by phone or Internet, which eliminates having to drive to a registration station. Call (888) 706-6367 or go to www.mndnr.gov/gameregistration to do so.Other informative websites also are accessible for hunters who have Internet access on their cellphones. And, of course, there are cellphone apps for hunters, too. Among the new deer hunting apps this year is “Deer Diary, the App for Hunters.”
The app is available for Android and iPhones users and offers satellite map locations, current weather data (sky condition, temperature, wind direction/speed), the ability to share hunting information on www.DeerDiary.com without giving up your exact location and a locator tool that gives you the exact location of your stand and allows you to mark harvest locations or, say, blood trails and the easiest way to get back to your camp or vehicle.“Successful hunters know their surroundings and understand the conditions that make for the best hunts. With ‘Deer Diary’ it’s easy to record these conditions, see patterns and ultimately become more effective on the hunt,” said Gus Saucerman of Indiana, the app’s owner and creator.
Cost of the app is $1.99 and the eight reviews of the app as of Friday were mostly positive. For more on the app or to download, go to www.DeerDiary.com.“That (the app) is a great example of how things are changing,” Collette said. “I know hunters who have kept good notes over the years. That’s just a smart way of looking at hunting. If so, I would embrace that. You can’t begrudge people for stepping it up in note-taking. As long as you keep it to that it’s fine.”

BRIAN S. PETERSON may be reached at brian.peterson@brainerd dispatch.com or 855-5864. To follow him on Twitter, go to www.twitter.com/brian_speterson. For his blogs, go to www. brainerddispatch.com.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Florida Wild Hogs

The wild pig (Sus scrofa), also called the wild hog, wild boar or feral pig, is not a Florida native and may have been introduced by Spanish explorer Hernando DeSoto as early as 1539.
They occur in all of Florida's 67 counties within a wide variety of habitats, but prefer oak-cabbage palm hammocks, freshwater marshes and sloughs and pine flatwoods. Wild pigs can reach weights of more than 150 pounds and be 5-6 feet long. They usually travel in small family groups or alone.
Wild pigs are omnivorous (eating all kinds of foods, both plants and animals) and feed by rooting with their broad snouts. They may cause disturbance of the soil and ground cover vegetation and leave the area looking like a plowed field.
Trying to prevent wild pigs from coming onto your property is usually futile, but adequate fencing can keep them out of small yards and gardens. On private property, nuisance pigs may be trapped using pens with trap doors and baited with acorns or old corn. Trapped animals may not be released on public land, and can only be released on private property with landowner permission. See the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services' Regulations for Trapping and Transporting Feral Swine.
Wild pigs are legally defined as wildlife and are the second-most popular, large animal hunted in Florida (second only to the white-tailed deer).
On private property with landowner permission, wild pigs may be hunted year round using rifles, shotguns, crossbows, bows or pistols. There is no size or bag limit, and you may harvest either sex. Also, no hunting license is required.
On wildlife management areas (WMAs), hogs may be taken during most hunting seasons, except spring turkey. But, if it's during archery season, you must use a bow - during muzzleloading gun season, you can only use a muzzleloader. And, you do need a hunting license as well as management area permit and any other necessary permits to hunt wild pigs on WMAs - where on some, daily bag limits on wild pigs do apply, and on a few, there's even a minimum size limit on what you can take.
Best Hog Hunting WMAs

Northwest Region - Aucilla, Blackwater Hutton Unit, portions of Blackwater, Apalachicola Bradwell Unit, Choctawhatchee River and portions of Joe Budd
North Central Region - Andrews, Flying Eagle, Big Bend Hickory Mound Unit, Big Bend Snipe Island Unit, Big Bend Tide Swamp Unit, Mallory Swamp, Steinhatchee Springs and Devil's Hammock
Northeast Region - Tosohatchee is the best hog area where hunters get to use dogs. In terms of sheer numbers of hogs taken, Three Lakes typically is tops, followed by Tosohatchee, Triple N Ranch, Guana River, Bull Creek, Three Lakes Prairie Lakes Unit and Fort Drum.
Southwest Region - Green Swamp has the largest harvest each year, followed by Green Swamp West, Babcock/Webb, Chassahowitzka and Myakka State Forest.
South Region - Dinner Island Ranch, J.W. Corbett, Dupuis, Okaloacoochee Slough, Allapattah Flats and Hungryland

Hunting the vastness of Florida

Hunting the vastness of Florida


October 07, 2011 2:00 PM

Bill Gamblin

 Deer season in Florida is about a diverse as its population and activities.
Due to the diverseness of the state those who wish to hunt deer could actually do so from July all the way to February based on the zones and environmental conditions.
Ironically Northwest Florida is the leader for deer taken statewide with Santa Rosa County ranked tops across the Sunshine State.
In Santa Rosa County according to the 2010 FWC Deer Harvest Survey Report, 10,584 deer were harvested and hunters reported spending a total of 151,118 hunting days in the woods, which was also tops in the state.
Next in both categories were our neighbors in Okaloosa County with 10,163 deer and 146,843 days respectively.
Escambia County also finished in the top 10 with 6,238 deer harvested and 69,041 hunting days reported in its survey.
The numbers actually are not that surprising to some.
“Personally those numbers sound high,” said Donna Tucker, Executive Director of the Santa Rosa County Chamber of Commerce. “But I can sit here and give you a list of people who hunt in private hunting clubs or own land to hunt on.
“The word is already getting out in the hunting segment, but what we will have to make sure of is the accommodations for the groups and the fuel necessary to meet their needs.”
While residents in South Florida and around the Everglades have been hunting since July, hunters here in northwest Florida are preparing for deer season to open on Oct. 22 with crossbow season.
“The dates to the deer seasons across the state of Florida correspond to the rut,” said Stan Kirkland, Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission Public Information Coordinator for Northwest Florida. “Florida is so diverse compared to others states that it has several different ruts and it would be hard to set one period of dates to accommodate the entire state.”
While the local gun season in Zone D – which is comprised of all or portions of Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, Walton, Holmes, Washington, Bay, Jackson, Calhoun, Gulf, Liberty, Gadsden, Franklin, Leon, and Wakulla counties – the break is designed to meet needs of the hunters and when they traditionally like to hunt.
General gun season will begin on Nov. 24 and last through Nov. 27 before taking a break until Dec. 10.
After Dec. 10 the general gun season will run until Feb. 19, with a period from Dec. 26 to Jan. 1 where antlerless deer may also be taken.
“It would be just way too hard on the deer if we ran the season for lets say 72 straight days,” Kirkland said. “If we started on Nov. 24 and ran so many day then many hunters feel they would miss out on the rut.
“By having the break from Nov. 27 to Dec. 10 it allows those who traditionally want to hunt during the Thanksgiving Holiday to do so while also allowing those who want to hunt near the rut that opportunity as well.”
An antlerless deer is a deer, other than a spotted fawn, that does not have antlers or antlers shorter than five inches in length above the hairline.
The rut, or deer-breeding season, is when many hunters feel they have the best chance for a big or trophy buck.
Hunters feel the buck, or male deer, is too preoccupied with breeding a doe and eating for energy in order to breed and sighting become more frequent.
Rutting of deer usually occurs in late summer into early fall.
“We have done a great deal of studies and surveys recently to get a better understanding of the rutting seasons so we can set the deer seasons accordingly across the state,” Kirkland said. “We have a ton of information we have put together to help us nail down the deer rut.”
While Florida’s geography or sheer size has something to do with when seasons are established, another factor is the topography or dense wooded conditions.
“In places like Kentucky or Illinois it is not as dense with wooded conditions during the deer season and it allows for a shorter or condensed season,” Kirkland said. “Here in Florida we have much denser wooded conditions where in places like Kentucky or Illinois you can see for much longer distances during the season when the leaves fall.
“By being able to see for several hundred yards you will be able to harvest deer much faster.”
According to the 2010 Deer Harvest Survey conducted by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, deer hunting was down overall last year compared to 2008 and 2009.
Overall most hunters participate in the general gun season (93.3 percent), state wide the number of hunters have fallen to 63.7 percent compared to the past two years when the percentage of total hunters were 68.9 (2008) and 68.1 (2009) respectively.
There were two increases compared to 2008 last season and those involved crossbow season and the NW Zone Special Archery and Muzzleloading Gun Season.
Kirkland indicated one other area that has gone down in numbers is where hunting dogs are concerned.
Free running dogs must be permitted now and have permission to hunt on private land, but public lands remain unregulated.
“We are not getting that many permit request for dogs,” Kirkland said. “These regulations we put in place regarding a permit were to provide relief to landowners who had an issue with free running dogs on their land.
“We know the dog cannot read what is posted and what isn’t, but it is a mechanism to help hold the owner of the dogs responsible for not keeping the dogs under control.”
In Northwest Florida (Zone D) 69,321 deer were reportedly killed over 944,995 deer hunter days.
Santa Rosa and Okaloosa counties were at the top of that list as they were number one and two in the state respectively for the number of deer harvested and the number of deer hunter days.
Santa Rosa led the state with 10,584 deer harvested with Okaloosa a close second with 10,163.
In the number of deer hunter days Santa Rosa led the state with 151,118 days while Okaloosa was second with 146,843.


Total Harvest by County (Public and Private Lands)
County Deer Killed Hunter Days Bag per hunter day
Escambia 6,238 69,041 0.151
Santa Rosa 10.584* 151,118* 0.086
Okaloosa 10,163 146,843 0.107
Walton 4,977 63,013 0.071
Holmes 1,963 31,471 0.046
Washington 4,065 48,192 0.113
Bay 3,925 47,239 0.098
Jackson 5,467 74,227 0.109
Calhoun 4,135 42,898 0.131
Gulf 771 10,163 0.085
Liberty 1,752 36,027 0.045
Gadsden 4,416 62,382 0.096
Franklin 491 11,215 0.042
Leon 3,154 42,686 0.162
Wakulla 3,715 58,317 0.072
Information from the FWC Deer Harvest Survey 2010 Report
Sidebar
Zone D – Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, Walton, Holmes, Washington, Bay, Jackson, Calhoun, Gulf, Liberty, Gadsden, Franklin, as well as the eastern parts of Leon and Wakulla counties.
Archery Season – A
Oct. 23 – Nov. 23
Antlered or antlerless deer by bow only
Crossbow Season – C
Oct. 22 – Nov. 23
Antlered or antlerless deer by crossbow or bow only
Nov. 28 – Dec. 2
Antlered deer only by crossbow or bow
Muzzleloading Gun Season - M
Dec. 3 – Dec. 9
Feb. 20 - Feb. 26
Antlered deer only by muzzleloader, crossbow, or bow
General Gun Season - D
Nov. 24 – Nov. 27
Dec. 10 – Feb. 19
Antlered deer entire season.
Antlerless deer may be taken Dec. 26 – Jan 1 by all legal centerfire rifles and pistols, shotguns, muzzleloaders, crossbows, and bows
A – Must have $5 Archery Season Permit as well as hunting license. It is prohibited to use bows equipped with sights or aiming devices with electr onic computational capabilities or light (laser) projection during Archery Season
C – Must have $5 Crossbow Season Permit as well as hunting license
M – Must have $5 Muzzleloading Gun Season Permit as well as hunting license. The only muzzleloaders than can be used during Muzzleloading Gun Season are those that take black power or non-nitro-cellulose substitute and are fired by wheel lock, flintlock, percussion cap or center fire primer (including 209 primers). Muzzleloarders using smokeless powder, those that can be loaded from the breech or those with self-contained cartridge ammunition capabilities are not legal during Muzzleloading Gun Season.
D – Free-running dogs may be used for hunting but must wear collars listing the owner’s name and address. When using dogs to hunt deer on private property, hunters must first register with the FWC (at no cost) the tract of land they have permission to hunt, and all deer dogs must have their FWC-issue registration number on their collars. Copies of the registration also must be in hunter’s possession when using dogs to pursue deer.