As this Idaho Mountain Express and Guide article points out, while global warming and development is driving some animals north, Shiras moose are heading south and west, populating some areas well beyond their historic range. Scientists admit they don't know what accounts for the move, but at least one wonders about the Western reintroduction of wolves, noting that "If wolves are putting pressure on moose, they will go some place where there aren't wolves." (Click here for the story)
Enough snowmobilers are rocketing their machines atop patches of open water to create a name for the practice. It's called skimming, and this past Sunday on New Hampshire's Lake Winnipesaukee, 51-year-old Daniel Harper of Bellingham, MA, died doing it. With due respect for the dead, the whole thing does beg a question about the prudence (or sobriety) of skimmers in general. Or, as a friend of mine put it more bluntly than I might: "Does skimming make the inhabitants of northern states smarter by natural selection?" What do you think? (Click here for the story)
To me, the inspiration to practice wilderness survival skills is based in an ideology of minimalism. The less gear you bring, the more intimate an experience you will have with the outdoors. Going with less also means that you can't rely on your gear as a safety net of comfort, rather you must be creative and find new solutions in order to succeed.
Alabama has a new state record alligator after a Mobile man and five of his buddies snagged a monstrous, 700 lb. gator on the first night of the season.
There is a new, undisputed Alabama state record alligator. Matt Thornton of Mobile, along with five of his hunting partners, killed a 13-foot, 5-inch behemoth that tipped the scales at a whopping 701 pounds on the first night of the fourth gator season on the Mobile-Tensaw Delta. I didn't really scout before the season, but I fished the area a lot and saw a big gator in that area," Thornton said of the stretch of Tensaw River a quarter-mile south of Lower Bryant's Landing where they caught the alligator.
"We didn't really know he was that big until we actually hooked him." Before Thornton's animal stretched the tape and scales to such impressive proportions, two animals killed in 2007 unofficially shared the title of the state's top gator.
When I craft a spear there is a part of me that can’t help but feel connected to the “inner caveman” that lurks somewhere deep in each of us. Knowing that this ancient weapon has kept humans alive on the earth for thousands of years gives me a unique respect for its place in our history. But the spear isn't just a relic of the past. I believe it remains an important tool for the modern woodsman, but probably not for the reasons many would think.