Sunday, December 2, 2012

Deer Hunting 2012

    DEER! 2012


     Even though I thought I wouldn't be able to get up in a tree enough this year during bow season because of Piper and bird hunting, I actually spent quite a bit of time in the woods. With a few close calls and some frustration I had only wounded one small four pointer. He came out early, a couple hours before sunset and stepped out about 20 yards from me. He presented me with a clear 20 yard broad side shot. I whiffed the first shot, grazing his chest. He was unaware of what happened and gave me a second shot. I drew back and THWAP! Except he didn't take off, he merely strolled away, leaving me to believe I missed twice. When I got down from my stand I found my arrow. It had blood on the fletchings and the broad head but not the shaft. I found blood on the leaves, but after a couple hundred yards of tracking this dried up and left me with nothing to track.
    Opening morning of shotgun my dad came down to Rehoboth. With a lot of gun fire in the woods it was apparent the deer were moving. Four (4) does walked within 40 yards of my dad and he took the biggest one. He pushed the other three (3) towards me. With a shot at 60 yards I looked in my scope and took a couple shots. Again found blood but the trail ran cold quickly.
    On the third morning I was tired and did not feel like getting up. It was a cold dark morning and it had snowed lightly the night before. I got in my tree stand early. I watched a group of turkeys, that had roosted the night before, come down off their roost and fly into the field behind me. As I turned to look at the turkeys I locked eyes with a buck who had come in from behind me. Frozen, I remembered my uncle telling me to never look a deer in the eye or he would spook so I averted them to the sky, while keeping him in my peripherals. He went on grazing and I raised my gun. As I looked into the scope I realized I wasn't able to see due to the fact I had left my scope's protection caps on! I slowly removed them and realized the buck had stepped behind a group of trees. For a slight moment I thought he was going to turn and walk away. However early that morning I had sprayed from my stand some buck bomb, (doe estrus in a can). I noticed the buck lifted his nose and started walking right at me. At twenty (20) yards I pulled the trigger. He mule kicked and took off! I thought I was doomed to repeat another unsuccessful track. I took a second shot while he was at full sprint. I gave it an hour and came back to hair and blood all over the ground. The blood trail was much easier than the previous two I had that year. The ground looked like it had been the site of a massacre. I found my buck approximately 100 yards from my stand. He didn't go too far due to the fact that my second shot had nearly blasted his back leg off. Before I shot I knew I saw antlers and I thought between 4 - 6 points. When I got up to him and counted 8 I almost passed out. At that moment I remembered why I sat in a tree, in the cold, for countless hours. Why I spent so much money on licenses, gear, and time off from work. Shooting that 8 pointer was the culmination of a lot of time, money, effort, and sacrifice.
 

     Here are some of the photos from my trail camera I had out earlier this year. Disregard the date and times since I was too lazy to set them up correctly. The time was about 12 hours off. The last picture could possibly be the 8 point I shot. Either that or there is another decent buck in those woods... there's always black powder season!



Hard to tell if its the same deer or not, but this is a decent spread.
Dad's doe on the meat pole

Both deer in the truck





8 points, 3 1/2 year old, 135 lbs

Paradise


     For anyone who is looking for the motivation to get out and sit in a stand, just remember, like an old timer once told me, you won't shoot a deer unless you're in the woods. Get out there because the longer you sit, the greater your chances are. Just when you think you couldn't get any more frustrated with how things are going, within a matter of seconds everything can change. Never give up!

Upland Hunting 2012

      BIRDS! 2012

    It's been a while since my last blog. This is because I have been busy outdoors. With fall brings the hunting season for so many things. With Piper's first season I tried to get her out as much as possible, and to watch her progress within a few months has been a real joy. Someone once told me that a good bird dog is self trained, and although I overall disagree with that statement, a lot of that rings true.
     Hunting with Piper this year was what I would call, "controlled chaos." She was so excited to run around and find birds that she would, a lot of times, out run her own nose. Over the summer I had purchased a bird launcher and some live quail. This worked at first but I had done something wrong because Piper was blinking birds! Blinking birds means she knew where the bird was planted, but refused to find and point it. I was at a loss, and thinking I had ruined my dog for good, I reverted to the words of an experienced bird dog trainer and hunter who had a simple montra, "WILD BIRDS, WILD BIRDS, WILD BIRDS." These words rang truer than any other advice I had received pertaining to dog training.
    Since there are little to no wild birds in south eastern, Mass, I brought Piper home with me to the Berkshires while visiting my parents. There I was able to find a few spots abundant with both grouse and woodcock. From her first outing in the Berkshire hills, Piper was busting birds. She quickly learned the scent of grouse and woodcock and even before opening day she was pointing woodcock. In my opinion I was very close to ruining a good bird dog, putting her on wild birds was the best thing I could have ever done.
    By the end of the season I had shot (at) numerous birds including pheasant, quail, grouse, and woodcock. For a first season I could not be happier. She is also retrieving well. I took her out a few times duck hunting and had her retrieve a few ducks along with my aging 12 year old lab. As far as bird hunting goes, I would say the season was a complete success.

    The following photos were taken from the first day of woodcock hunting. Within a half hour of hunting in Savoy State forest I not only shot my limit, but missed quite a few as well. These three birds were shot in a row. Piper pointed, I took a step while "whoa-ing" her and one bird after another went up. Apparently this is a rare occurrence, but it happened to me on my first day out, within my first half hour. Not too bad.

Here's a video of Piper pointing, relocating, and then flushing a rooster pheasant. I made a lucky shot and dropped it.




Good girl




This photo was taken on a trip up to Maine. It was unsuccessful with only two grouse flushes, but it was a good experience anyway.


These photos were taken while duck hunting. These were Piper's first duck retrieves as well as what will probably be Smokey's (my black lab's) last. Even during the colder mornings piper did well in the cold water. The problem with her is that it's difficult to cover up a bright white dog while sitting in a blind, but we manage.
Attempting to hide

Piper's first retrieve, a wood duck!



Green winged teal


Smokey



Some last minute retriever training 

     Here's some pictures from the pheasant hunting season:

Piper's first Pheasants



Piper on a pheasant retrieve
Proud



Here's a video of Louie and I hunting from an old row boat on the Palmer River, Rehoboth, MA.  Piper was waiting for me to use the right command, "Back,"but in all the excitement I was the one who messed up and caused her a little anxiety.


Thursday, June 14, 2012

Piper Training



Piper continues her retriever training. She is currently 5 months old and learning fast. In this video I introduce the whistle command for "back" and start the retrieve from a "crate" or "kennel" command. Enjoy.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Ticks

Ticks... Nature's asshole.

        With only two weeks left to fill my last spring turkey tag, I was spending a lot of time in the woods. On top of that I was spending a lot of time taking the dogs out and doing a little training. Living in this part of the country I have become so accustomed to finding ticks on myself and my dogs that I would simply give them a flick if they were not attached or just pinch them off it I found them attached. I had heard about Lyme disease but never really took any serious consideration about getting it. I am constantly checking myself and my dogs. I was told once that a tick needs to be attached for 24 hours in order to transmit Lyme disease. Since I never really found any ticks attached to me I didn't think much about it. Both my dogs have the vaccine for Lyme, I however, do not...
Check your Pets! Gross.
       Don't get me wrong, if they offered a human version of the Lyme vaccine I would get it in a heart beat. Living in south eastern New England I am among the most dense area of tick populations in the world. With 50% of deer ticks, (black legged ticks or Ixodes scapulars) carrying Lyme's or one of the other forms of diseases it has, calling this area high risk is an understatement.  Lyme disease is an epidemic. The CDC reports that the number of CONFIRMED cases of Lyme has practically doubled from 2000 to 2010, going from 17,000 to 30,000 in a matter of 10 years. The tick population is on the increase and the disease is spreading. In Massachusetts alone there was over 4,000 confirmed cases in 2010. The scary part is that there are probably 10 times the number of people with Lyme disease that go undiagnosed. This year, spring of 2012 I have become a statistic. I was diagnosed with having Lyme disease, and let me tell you first hand, my experience has not been a pleasant one.
      To think that such a small bug could cause such problems. I want to share my experience to give people an insight into what to look for and help prevent the same thing from happening to them. In fact there are some people out there who are are suffering with debilitating symptoms that are going misdiagnosed. The reason is that Lyme affects everyone differently and has a wide range of symptoms. If someone goes untreated their immune system becomes weaker and this invites other diseases to come in. Luckily, (in a general sense of the word) I was diagnosed in the first stage of Lyme.
     I was sitting in on a training for work when I started to get the chills. This progressed to an uncontrollable shiver with an extreme headache. I was tired and extremely foggy. I went home, put on the warmest clothing I could find and hid under the covers. I began to warm up, really fast. Before I knew it I was on fire. I was sweating uncontrollably and realized I probably had a fever. I quick check with a thermometer, (the one that goes under the tongue of course) and I figured I had the flu... it read 103.6. I took some ibuprofen and it went down. I did what they always say, rest, drink lots of fluids, etc, however three days later and I was in the same routine. Chills, headache, fever, body ache continued over and over. I decided to go to the E.R. After 16 hours, two bags of fluids taken intravenously, blood work, urine test, flu test, and an unsuccessful attempt at a spinal tap, (I should add, fuck spinal taps. That shit hurts. I would rather be tazed) I left the E.R. feeling worse than I had the day before. They tested for Lyme, but told me it would take a few days. They told me that I probably had a viral version of spinal meningitis. I went home and let the onset of really feeling like shit take place.
     My fever subsided, which was good news, but I could not stand up without shooting pain in my head and eyes. I would get dizzy and want to throw up. Also I called the E.R. to see if my Lyme test came back yet and it had...NEGATIVE. As soon as I heard that I erased it from my thoughts. I must have something else then.  I pretty much laid flat for three more days before I decided to go back to the E.R. One of the reasons I was persuaded by my girlfriend to go back was because she noticed a rash on my back that seemed to be getting worse. My ears were also bothering me and my jaw hurt... I figured that my situation would probably end up as the next episode on House.
My "Bulls eyes"
     I went to a different hospital this time. Within an hour I was examined and told that I had Lyme disease. The E.R. doctor told me that my rash was consistent with erythema migrans, also known as disseminated Lyme disease. The disease was going into my body and that is what was producing all the rashes. This was typical in stage 1 Lyme. He told me that my headaches were caused by the spinal tap and they would go away within a week, (once again, fuck spinal taps.) I left feeling better, probably due to the fact that I knew what was wrong with me. I was prescribed amoxicillin for 3 weeks and started my dosage that day.
     I was told by the E.R. doctor to see my primary care physician, so the next day I made an appointment. I went and was seen by a nurse practitioner. She told me I did not have Lyme disease because my blood test from the first E.R. visit was negative and that the rash I had, (now all over my body) did not look like Lyme, (according to her book.) She told me to stop taking the antibiotic because that was causing the rash. She made me make another appointment to see the doctor the next day. Well after doing some research on the internet I pretty much self diagnosed myself with Lyme. I did not take the advice of the nurse. I kept taking the antibiotic and saw the doctor the next day. He told me he was not convinced it was Lyme. I continued taking amoxicillin anyway. Three days later the E.R. doctor who had diagnosed me with Lyme called and told me the blood results were in. I tested POSITIVE for Lyme Disease.
    I am not telling this story to make my primary care doctor, or the other E.R. doctors look incompetent, although they might be? My reason behind this is to show how difficult it is to be diagnosed with Lyme, even with all the tell tale signs. I can only imagine what would have happened to me if I did not break out with the "bulls eye" rash. I would have gone on undiagnosed which leads to serious medical issues down the road. People in stage two and beyond are affected with serious nervous system issues, cognitive problems, arthritis, and vision problems. This all comes from going undiagnosed and untreated.
    Being an outdoorsman here in New England has its risks.  I know now that I will take more precautions when entering the woods, or doing anything outdoors for that matter. Using Permethrin on my clothing, tucking pants into my socks, using the dryer on clothing when I come home (the heat kills ticks) checking and double checking. Using all the pesticides on myself and the dogs probably has side effects too... but I guess thats when you have to weigh the risks.
     If you live in an area with a dense population of deer ticks, first of all make yourself informed. There are quite a few articles and documentaries on the issue. "Hidden in the leaves" is a good video, and you can find it on youtube. hidden in the leaves. Then take proper precautions to keep from getting bit. But since ticks are tiny, and they numb the area where they bite it makes it almost impossible to see or feel them. Having said that, you should know the warning signs of Lyme disease. The earlier it is diagnosed and treated, the better chance you have of beating it.
     The fact that this tiny bug exists sucks enough, excuse the pun. They are creepy bugs that want to crawl on you and suck your blood. That in itself is gross and makes me hate ticks for simply existing. However then you add to it that they can give you a debilitating illness that could in fact ruin your quality of life. Can it get much worse? I want to know why there isn't more being done about it. You see Bird Flu and Swine Flu making all this crazy hype in the media and the government responds by mass producing a vaccine for it. This is for only a few hundred cases being reported. Lyme disease is reporting almost 40,000 in a year and growing, and its widespread through the entire continental U.S. not just here in the North East. If a vaccination for dogs it available where is the one for humans?
     Until a solution is found, stay informed, be safe and check twice.



Friday, May 4, 2012

Opening week MA Spring Turkey Hunt



Turkey Footage





       Here is a little video I filmed with the camera on my bow. I took it out opening day and sat in a ground blind since the weather was terrible... as you will see. I had the opportunity to take a small jake but decided not to since it was the first day I was out and there is a long season ahead of me.  I would have filmed the bird I shot except for the fact that I don't have a mount for a camera on my shotgun. This is something I have been trying to figure out. Enjoy.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Piper Training



      Here is a little training video of some retriever training with Piper. Most people might think that playing fetch with your dog is not really training. It should be fun, the point of all of this is for the puppy to learn that going out and bringing back an item is fun and exciting, like play time. Once she associates playing fetch as fun time you can start to put some controls on retrieving.  German Shorthair Pointers do have a natural instinct to retrieve, but not all GSP owners bring it out. In my opinion the dog training should not stop after the shot. Meaning, after you shoot a bird the dog's work is not over. Finding the birds is the main reason for hunting with a dog, but finding the bird after its shot is just as important, if not more important through an ethical/conservationist standpoint. It does not look very good if hunters go around shooting animals, wounding or killing them and not recovering them. Retriever training is also the start of training to track.
      In this video you will see that all I use is a long lead and something to throw. I have been using a toy pheasant that Piper likes. I also bought a quail training dummy and some orange bumpers. For some reason she could not care less about the orange bumpers. She will run out, smell it and wander off. If I hold the bumper in front of her she will look at me like, "what are you doing? I don't want this." 
     I started off training by using a small room, like the hallway in my house.  I closed all the doors so that when I threw the toy out she would run out and grab it and have no choice but to bring it back. I would reward her and praise her. She got this concept pretty easy so I moved outside. I put her on a lead so that when she runs out and grabs the toy I can coax her back into me, but to be honest she rarely needs reminding to do that. I am going to continue with this kind go training for a few more weeks until I put more controls on her. Right now its just fun time. Once she gets more basic commands like sit and stay I can start to advance. Then I can start using real birds, like frozen ducks... so stay tuned, more to come.

Piper retrieving<------------youtube video





Friday, April 6, 2012

MA quick Reference



Mass Wildlife : A quick reference for all MA hunters<------If you hunt in Mass and you are always finding yourself checking the dates for season, bag limits and so on.... this is a great source taken off the MA wildlife website.  Just waiting for April 30th...


Saturday, March 31, 2012

Piper Training


     Here is a video with Piper training to point. As I said in a previous post, I am not a professional trainer, in fact this is my first pointing dog. All videos that I post I hope can be useful to someone like me, someone training for the first time. In this video you will see me using a wing on a fishing pole. Using the wing to trigger a natural point is much like my beagle seeing a rabbit for the first time. I didn't teach her to point, she just does it. I don't know, maybe I am a tad insane or weird but seeing her point for the first time is exciting! Just like watching my beagle run a rabbit, its just one of those things that unless you experience it you won't know the feeling. In the picture below you will see a point; head down, steady gaze, tail up, and most of the time one of the front paws with come up too.


     I called as many game bird dealers as possible in order to obtain a wing. Many breeders in the region lost a lot of birds due to an early snow storm in October. I was getting frustrated trying to find a wing to use when I talked to one game breeder who told me I could buy a wing from Cabelas. So that is what I did. They were fairly inexpensive, 8 bucks for a pair. I bought a pair of wings from both a pheasant and a quail. I plan on raising live quail so I figured I would start with some quail wings as well. I obtained a permit from MA DEM. I can possess up to 25 live quail. I built the pen already and I used a very useful book, "Training the Versatile Hunting Dog," by Chuck Johnson. If you plan on getting a versatile hunting dog, meaning a dog that can hunt upland game as well as retrieve for waterfowl hunting, I would HIGHLY recommend buying this book. Read the book cover to cover and then reread each section as you prepare to train for each. In the book it even gives blue prints on how to build pigeon and quail pens, dog kennels, and training tables. It has all the information anyone, like myself, who is training a versatile gun dog for the first time, needs. In one of the photos below you can see the quail pen I built. All together building it probably costed around $300 and took 2 days to build. I am currently waiting for the spring hatch to obtain some chicks. "It takes birds to train a bird dog."


Harry Training




       Heres a video of Harry my beagle. The video is a couple quick clips I took from my phone while he was on a rabbit. When I first got Harry I tried to find something on how to train a beagle to chase a rabbit. I did not find a whole heck of a lot. I really could not understand why there wasn't any information on it until our first encounter with one. Upon returning home to my girlfriend's apartment one night in Newport, RI, I spotted a cottontail in the yard. I took Harry out from his crate, put him on a leash and ran him outside. Luckily the rabbit was still there in the yard unsuspecting. I slowly walked Harry over to the rabbit, his eyes were locked on to it. I got closer and closer until finally the rabbit took off. Harry leaped out of my arms and started after it. Luckily I still had him on his leash, as the tiny 3 month old puppy astounded me as he gave me a lesson on gun dog genetics. His DNA told him to chase that rabbit, not me. I was very excited and proud, the only bad thing was now he had the scent in his nose. Every time he went outside in the yard after that he had to be put on a lead because there is always a chance that he will find that scent again and be gone.
      Harry hasn't had a lot of actual hunting experience. I took him out around Christmas time while I was back home in the Berkshires. We didn't find any hare, but he at least got some exercise. I think he slept for two days straight after that.


More pictures of all my dogs. Smokey and Harry in the snow last winter and Piper kicking Smokey off his bed this winter.



       At this point in time, although as I am still gearing up for Turkey season, these are my two main priorities at the moment. The one on top is the newest edition to the pack. Her name is Piper and right now she is an 11 week old German Shorthair Pointer. We got her from a breeder named Bill Duffy in Ashby, MA. She was the runt of the litter but she is growing very fast. She is completely all legs right now. She weighed in at 13 lbs while on her vet visit last week but I would imagine that 1/2 of that weight is her legs and paws.
      The other puppy is a year and a half old beagle. I got him from a breeder in Swansea, MA, Hockomock Swamp Farm. He is actually considered a pocket beagle because he does not reach the 13 inch limit considered by the AKC. As a member of the Oak Hill Beagle Club in Rehoboth, MA, Harry loves to chase rabbits. However he does not particularly enjoy the cold. I don't know if this is because he is small or do in part because of how spoiled he is.
     I have always loved dogs. As I posted earlier the picture of me and my black lab, Smokey a few years ago on a duck hunt. I am by no stretch of the imagination a professional dog trainer. Having said that, I have accumulated as much information as possible on training, from obedience to becoming a gun dog. I have read literature, scoured the internet, and asked for advice from professionals in my area. I am going to post videos and experiences of training with the latest edition, Piper. This is my first pointing dog and I would like to show her progress. Any tips on training or any pictures or videos of your own gun dog and training can be sent to me at brubru2452@gmail.com and I would be more than willing to post them for you. After having her for only 3 weeks I am very excited to see what she can do.



Took a 5 point opening day of bow and took the four point 2nd day of shotgun.