Iguassu Falls

Iguassu Falls

Calling the Others

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Showing posts with label Woodswoman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woodswoman. Show all posts

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Cultivating Silence, Skulking, Lurking and Shadowy Avoidance.



Remember this: Wild creatures have no thought of the future only NOW.

"Perhaps there is no aspect of wild nature more fascinating than a consideration of the artful ways in which birds and animals meet their emergencies. Our human emergencies are of various kinds--social, financial, psychological, physical. But in nature, crises are always associated with physical peril. We are often trying to escape debt, ennui, loneliness, crowds, vauge but mastering fears of the future. Wild creatures probably have no thought of the future; what they try to escape is immediate danger, fraught with the possibility of death.
In my long life in the wilderness woods, in a country especially rich in wild life, I always took an especial interest in watching how children of Nature met their trials; for in their doing so, they often manifested a poise and an ingenuity that disclosed not only a high intelligence, but what appeared to me to be spiritual quality--a ready dauntlessness that is nowise short of valor.
One day I was walking through a stretch of bulrushes. My setter dog had ranged on ahead of me. Suddenly I heard him begin to bark excitedly. Knowing that he had encountered some kind of wild animal. I hurried forward, soon coming to a break in the marsh where there was a deep brackish pond, perhaps an acre in area. Almost halfway across this stretch of placid water an old raccoon was swimming fast. My dog was also swimming, bent on catching the coon. A raccoon, gentle and ingratiating by nature, can be a valiant fighter; and in shallow water he can often defend himself against an ordinary dog. In deep water the coon's chances are not so good.
Just beyond the halfway mark in the pond, to my surprise the raccoon stopped swimming. He had come on a submerged stump or log, the top of which was almost flush with the level of the water. The coon clambered up on this support, shook the water from his coat, turned, crouched, and so waited, facing my setter, that now, with rising hope, appeared to be certain of seizing his prey.
All about me stretched the great lonely marsh. Here before me was this land-locked lagoon. And in the middle of this arena I was about to see enacted a little drama of the wilds. Here two natural enemies were about to meet, one much stronger than the other. Could sagacity, some form of unpredictable strategy, save the day for the weaker of the two antagonists?
When the dog was within three feet of his wary prey, crouching there, as I thought defenseless, the raccoon suddenly thrust forward his little black hands, remarkably human in their shape and in their suggestion of sensitiveness. As soon as the dog was within reach, these hands gently but firmly took hold of my setter's ears, pushed his head under the water, and held him there. My dog made a wild struggle, as I could tell from the way in which his hind legs and tail frantically threshed the water. Just as I was about to wade in to save my setter from being drowned, the raccoon, with a look on his face that seemed to express contempt for inferiority, thrust the dog's head violently downward and away from him. Gasping pitifully, my setter swam painfully back to me, where he lay down on the edge of the pond and whined, confessing failure, and a dread of a further attempt. He was really more disheveled in spirit than in body. We left the wily old raccoon master of that field of honor. He was not smiling sardonically, but his aspect indicated that such was his feeling over my champion's inglorious discomfiture.
It seems to be a law of nature that anything (even a butterfly) will fight as a last resort. But an older law of nature enjoins wild things to evade trouble. After more than half a century of observing American wild life in its native haunts, I should say that we do not have a single bird, animal, or reptile that will normally take an aggressive attitude toward man unless it is cornered, or thinks it is. An exception perhaps should be made of mothers with their young; yet even they will move off into secrecy and hiding if they are not molested. Another exception is the individual, whose behaviour may be abnormal and therefore dangerous, because it is unexpected.
It is amazing how close wild things will lie or crouch, in the hope of being passed by completely. I remember scores of examples of this, but none more surprising than the case of an old turkey gobbler, a superb veteran, I knew, of many narrow escapes.
I had dried and burned off the stubble in one of my big rice fields. There I had turned in a drove of hogs to root it up. All this was to attract Wilson snipe that delight in such softened ground as they bore in the soil for their food. My sons were coming home for the winter holidays, and snipe shooting was a sport they enjoyed.
When the four of us went to the field, the fire and the hogs had done their work well. No cover of any kind remained except a stubborn solitary tussock or marsh near the center of the field. It was hardly big enough to hide a rabbit.
Approaching the field from different sides, two of us began a bombardment on the east, and two on the west. We kept following the snipe. We crossed and recrossed the field, passing many times near the small tuft of marsh, and shooting all around it. Finally, discovering that we had run completely out of shells, we started for the house. Near the middle of the field we came right to the lone tussock. All of us were within ten feet of it, when, to our amazement, a huge wild gobbler suddenly rose from his scant shelter, ran a few paces, and then took flight. Ponderous yet graceful, that flight took him to safety deep in the distant pine forest. For thrilling moments we watched his lessening black bulk against the pale blue sky.
In this case, as in practically all others that have come under my observation, a wild thing in a tight spot always asks, What's safest to do now? And very often the life saving artifice is to do nothing. We had come up to this open field from two sides. The wild turkey had seen us (he always will see a man before the man sees him), and he had forthwith decided to hide where he was. He crouched low by the little tussock; nor did all our fusillade of shots, and our calling to one another make him budge. His strategy was to wait it out. It was only when he saw that we were about to step on him that he moved.
In dangerous straits wild creatures may by no means resort to flight. They dread revealment. They know that an enemy is innocous if they remain unseen. They therefore cultivate silence, skulking, lurking, shadowy avoidance. Assuming a statuesque pose, a deer or a wild turkey will hold it so long that the eyes of a human watcher may grow weary. By doing nothing when they are startled, they appear to be nothing. I remember one day watching the dead top of a fallen tree. I was sure I saw the horns of a deer amid the dry branches, but could not quite distinguish them. After full twenty minutes, during which time the buck had not moved at all, this wary strategist stepped forth. I believe that many intelligent wild things, as this deer did, select cover favorable to camouflage. Thus I have long noticed that wild turkeys, in selecting roosting trees, invariably choose those that have mistletoe in them, or big bunches of moss, or squirrel nests."

Written by: Archibald Rutledge, deceased.

~Courtesy of AOFH~

Readin' His Book: An Excerpt from Archibald Rutledge


 
 
Remember this: Come follow me and you'll end up everywhere.

"Once on a golden autumn morning I was standing with my Negro foreman in the pinelands. He was quite matchless as a woodsman, as good as an Indian of the old days. Before us was a dense bay through which a deer drive was coming. On the still and balmy air the clamor of hounds and of drivers was momently increasing. Suddenly Prince and I saw a regal buck emerge from the dense thicket ahead of us. Rather deliberately he walked out into the open woods, where he came to a stand, facing us. We were about one hundred and fifty yards from him; our backs against two pines. We were standing close together. Whatever air was stirring was from the deer to us. He could not wind us; and as we intended to remain motionless he would not see us.
Behind him all the while the clamor kept increasing. The hounds were on his trail, and were coming fast. Yet there he stood, now and then turning his grand head to listen to the increasing uproar behind him. With all that tumult forcing him forward, he stood calculatingly still. Without moving, I whispered to my foreman, "Prince, why is he standing there like that? Why doesn't he come on?"
"He's readin' his book," the Negro said softly.
That old stag, with a wild hurricane of hunting at his very heels, stood there deliberately, ---"reading his book," mapping his elusive strategy. Before him lay thousands of acres of wild forest, and his obvious course would be to race straight ahead. The speed of the hounds would not trouble him, for no hound living could possibly overtake him; moreover, a master at skulking, he could utterly bewilder the dogs by dodging. But he had in his mind a way of escape that was by no means the obvious way.
A mile behind him lay the great river, beyond which was the vast wilderness of the Delta. There, he knew, was absolute safety for him.
Even as Prince and I watched in admiring amazement the great stag turned, threw up the tall banner of his snowy tail, and raced straight back the way he had come.
"Well, Prince," I said, "he surely read his book."
"And he done find the answer," Prince replied
Here, you see, was a case of subtle strategy, and a decision made even while peril was imminent. That buck thought his way out of danger; and that way of escape is, I believe, the one most commonly used by wild creatures to deliver themselves from death."

Written by: Archibald Rutledge, deceased.

~Courtesy of AOFH~

Funny Experimental Deer Lure Circa My Brother.





Remeber this: Peanut butter and acorns in the hand is a worthless nut in the bush.

Yesterday I was entertaining a conversation with my brother. I had told him about my misadventures in the woods with the deer. There is this one buck I have a long standing love-hate relationship with. This buck has the ability to live on a very small acreage of land without being ambushed. I have seen him running behind his clutch of doe heading for the swamp. His usual hideout when he is alone is out near the old hog parlor during the day. One day he was stalking me from the acorn patch by the cemetery because the crow tells on him sometimes. The conversation from my brother’s side was how I could entice or lure the buck to come out. As of late I have been not using any kind of lure because of the corn harvesting, oats, wheat, or soybean. The deer have plenty to eat along with the acorns that are falling out of the tree, the persimmons, or swamp mushrooms. I figure why waste a dollar by providing corn or some other lure when there is plenty all around. Eventually winter will come and the food will be scarce.

My brother tells me to get an apple, run a string through it then cover it with peanut butter. I started to laugh while thinking, “People do the craziest things”. I asked him did he think I was out to catch a big rat down in those woods. Next he would tell me to just hang tin cans and they could eat them much like a billy goat.

I do remember over the late summer I was trying to catch a critter cam photo of elusive deer in my backyard. It would seem a couple of doe and their offspring were sneaking into the yard after dark to eat the pears on the ground. Probably smelling my scent on the camera, one of them tilted it giving me a shot of only her ear. Pretty smart I thought:  pear bandits tilting the camera.

I told him in jest that I was going to try out his theory but in my own way. We ended the call with a chuckle. I went into the kitchen and scoured the cabinets for essential ingredients into this little wilderness gourmet diatribe. I found peanut butter, salt, rice crispies, and clover honey.

I reviewed my ingredients then realized I needed something special. I had previously taken a short trip to the river to pick some acorns off the trees there because they are bigger. I had a five gallon bucket half full of these little oak seed wonders. I took a pan and mixed all the ingredients into four evenly amounted acorn butter balls. I was laughing the whole time. Why do I do these things just for fun?

After I was happy with the consistency of the balls I placed them in a covered container inside of the refrigerator.

Later that evening I collected my hunting supplies and grabbed the sandwich bag with the acorn butter ball.  I drove down to the woods, unlocked the gate, drove in and stopped amongst the trees. I went to my usual hang-out but walked across the ladder bridge to drop the acorn butter ball onto the top of this blue feeder bucket that was tilted and completely empty. I went to sit in “the box”.  Hours passed. Deer were walking all around me and calling out on the game trail right behind me down one of the man-made corridors in the woods. Goat smell waifed up through the screen. It got darker and darker but no actual deer came out. I looked down the canal ditch and saw two black shadows moving in and out of the greens. This was the side of the area that quickly got swallowed by the shadow from the dying light. 

Feeling I had no luck on this venture collected my belongings and marched to the truck.

My thought on the acorn butter ball thing was raccoon action. I figured the coons would be down there playing patty cake with that ball and it would be gone by the morning or at least half washed in the ditch.

I went back this evening on the golf cart to check things out with this acorn butter ball. Sure enough something had been gnawing on it but what that was I do not know. I felt compelled to put another one in a different location to see what my results would be.

Now I have seen some mighty strange lures put up in the woods to attract deer. One time I went down to this place to hunt. In a moderate distance inside of the woods was a tree decorated like you would see at Christmas except the decorations were tampons. These tampons were covered with buck lure. I couldn’t believe my eyes. I put my gun down and began a belly laugh like no other. If you are ever told that men have a problem buying tampons for women it is a lie. They have no problem buying them to lure deer or at least robbing the tampon box of what they need.

I have even seen full body traps set in the woods with lure and a trip wire like you could catch a bear or a dog in. The two men in question actually caught a young peg horn buck then wrestled him out to freedom.

I know they say that deer like frost bitten apples but its not that cool here and winter hasn’t hit as it normally does. It use to get really cold in August or September but now it doesn’t get really cold here until Feb, March, or April.

As for experimental buck lures I am not sure if this is working but the jury is not out yet. I’ll give it until Monday before I do a thumbs up or thumbs down.

Written by:  W Harley Bloodworth

 

~Courtesy of the AOFH~

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Woodland Management: Wildlfe and Succession Forests


 
 
Remember this: Plan to day. Benefit tomorrow.
 
Lately I have been doing some work on a pine plantation. Pine plantations are stands where the trees are planted in rows. This is beneficial because you can drive down the rows to mow any unwanted underbrush or weed. The purpose here is not to let the underbrush (understory) grow out of hand. The ultimate goal is not to allow it to form into an unkempt forest of succession even though if it is left unattended over the years this could happen. It is a strange comment but sometimes you have to landscape your forest garden for the benefit of the wildlife, bugs, plant flora and enrich the soil itself. It being a habitat in itself managing the pine plantation improved the overall health of the habitat and surrounding areas.
I took a break to sit on a camo five gallon bucket overlooking a soybean field that abutted a cemetary. I was laying in wait reading a book when I got to the section that stated second growth trees and shrubs can grow so tall that it is not feasible or possible for deer to browse on the foliage. The concept here was that these tracts would eventually turn into a climax forest that couldn't support larger herds.
A climax forest or forest succession is a tract of land or forest that develops over a period of time.  Wildlife come and go carrying transient seeds. These seeds start to grow and the variety of plant flora changes with its own set of life sustaining demands. The soil erodes and becomes altered. Weather and climate changes make or destroy life at any given time. There in the ground is the forum for a sort of plant competition where all things start out small but with each passing year the foliage gets taller, thicker, or densier. The reason for this is pioneering species of trees that live in the upperstory sprout understory offspring which eventually replace them or fill in the space until the older tree dies or falls. If this area is not managed to maintain a stead sense of equal balance it will overgrow itself. This will eventuate in large amounts of work to tame it back to a manageable space. You may have some wildlife but not the kind you would see meanadering about.
Even as a hunter or just someone taking a walk, you find times where you stop and look at the bushes and those things unseen and think, "I am not walking into that." No one likes a briar patch. The only creature that likes a briar patch is one that is running from a predator. Even then it depends on who is in hot pursuit. The species mix of trees is constant. Transient wildlife that does come and go will most likely not stay if the browse of their choice is not present. If there is no brush or understory trees for them to feed on they have no reason to be there. They certainly can't climb up a tree unless the animal is a coon or opossum.
The forest or tract of land goes through cycles of varying durations of different factors that affect it in negative and positive ways.
Animals live in these places with insects and pertinent fungus for the same reason humans live where they live. Its basic need. Food, shelter, a place to reproduce, security, a place to hide, and co-exist with other creatures that can add to their benefit or survival. 
People would argue that pine plantations are not that beneficial but it depends on where you put it and how it affects the area.
Does it improve the area or not?
This particular pine plantation was planted on non-abandoned agricultural land. It was a personal choice. Hardwoods were not replaced. When this is done the area usually is a wetland and removing the hardwoods to replace it with pine will dry the area up. At the time of planting there was no habitat or biodiversity loss. Now years before you might could argue that before it was turned to farmland but not now. That time is past.
Now the pine plantation I am working does exists as a wildlife corridor and acts as a buffer for the neighboring natural forest that is a hardwood forest only feet away. There is a healthy contained mix of varying tree species increasing the options for different wildlife that want to dwell in one but feed off the other.
Factoring in the  environmental and ecological impact you will create or affect with a pine plantation is how you manage it.
Management is key: what  you do on it, to it, or around it will affect the land parcel in some way.
Managing a pine stand also bring the beneficial option of not intruding on natural forests for commercial gain. Its the 'other option'. These pine plantations are highly productive and the requirement for a large space of land is low.
This also brings about the point of how you can use a small section of land for maximum production without depleting the ground itself by using what is growing on it to sustain nutrient cycling on a property.
As far as wildlife goes, creatures have enough cover to hide in but without movement being restricted in such a way to make them learn the lay of the land works more as a trap than an escape route.
As a hunter, land owner or coalition of people trying to make the world or your speck a better place, the following should be considered:
  • Develop a management plan.
  • Plant variety and maintenance
  • Site preparation and management
  • Mid rotation management
  • Late rotation management
  • Landscape considerations
  • Harvest Techniques
  • Edge maintenance and consideration
  • Fertilizers and Herbacides
Creatures a pine plantation encourages in short:
  • Cicadidas
  • Rabbits
  • Squirrel
  • Deer
  • Raptor birds
  • Spiders
  • Varying birds
  • Raccoon
  • Snakes
  • Small animals
  • Quail or small game birds 
  • Bear
  • Boar
  • Fox
I was pondering the comments of people on the internet about how hunters do conservation today. How much money they put into the system on licenses and merchandise that feeds back into state governed and maintained public land. Great, I say but what about the little man you don't give credit to that lives across the street from you. You know, the one that disappears each morning, plugging away in his little neck of the woods for wildlife and plants that can't go out and buy things at the store to make their lives a luxury? That is the unsung hero you probably overlook or never know. I thought this was a nice statement but hunters are just as adapt at building and maintaining habitats for the game they pursue. Its nice to see people exchanging tirades but its the rare bird that will show you they are talking the talk and walking the walk. 
People have words but I have words and "actions".
 
As a tool for anyone that would like to get educated on this concept feel free to copy this link and go read something before reading is out of fashion.
 
 
Written by: W Harley Bloodworth
 

~Courtesy of the AOFH~