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Small Game

50 Best October Reader Photos

Huge elk, big bucks , nice trout and funny trail cam pics: these are the 50 best photos taken by our readers in October.

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2012 Pumpkin Contest: Win Knives and Machetes from Gerber!

Go find a pumpkin, carve it up, take a picture, and enter the photo in our 2012 Pumpkin Carving Contest. We'll give some great prizes from Gerber to the most creative jack-'o-lantern carved in a hunting, fishing, survival, or shooting theme.

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  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: Delaware

    0

    By Scott Bestul

    Cedar Swamp Wildlife Area/Woodland Beach Wildlife Area
    Location
    : east Delaware
    Size: 11,303 acres combined
    ZIP: 19977

    The state's only public lands dedicated to Quality Deer Management lie side-by-side in the marshlands of Delaware Bay. Antler restrictions introduced in 2004 (requiring an outside spread of 15 inches) have boosted the survival rate of young bucks, producing a bumper crop of 140-class three-year-olds. A generous spread of oak-hickory hardwoods and corn and soybean food plots supply the groceries; vast expanses of marshland supply the sanctuaries. "Deer get out in the marsh to escape hunting pressure," says Joseph Rogerson, deer biologist for Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife, who lives at Woodland Beach. "For the guy who's willing to walk and is prepared to deal with flies and mosquitoes, there are lots of islands and hummocks out there where early season deer lay up." Or wait for the rut, when the bugs are gone and big bucks leave the marsh to roam. [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: New Hampshire

    0

    By Scott Bestul

    Pisgah State Park
    Location
    : southwest New Hampshire
    Size: 13,168 acres
    ZIP: 03470

    "You can't get away from it all at Pisgah, but you can get away from a lot of it," Gustafson says. Relatively undeveloped by southwestern New Hampshire standards, the largest park in the Granite State system offers lower hunting pressure in a region that boasts the highest deer densities in the state. Rugged terrain provides plenty of places for deer to escape, and the herd's age structure proves it. Forty-five to 50 percent of adult bucks here are at least 2 1/2 years old. Those that reach 4 1/2 average 190 pounds.

    Connecticut Lakes Headwaters
    Location
    : north New Hampshire
    Size: 171,000 acres
    ZIP: 03592

    This former paper company tract was home to the Thurston buck, a 183 3/8 Boone & Crockett bruiser that stood as the New Hampshire state record for 10 years until dethroned in 2006. Once owned by International Paper, the land is now split between the State of New Hampshire and the Connecticut Lakes Timber Company. Every last glorious mile is open to public hunting. Deer densities are low, but the chances are good for a buck in the 270- to 280-pound range, says Will Staats, regional wildlife... [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: Vermont

    2

    By Scott Bestul

    Victory Basin Wildlife Management Area
    Location
    : northeast Vermont
    Size: 4,970 acres
    ZIP: 05824

    "You could easily have Victory Basin to yourself," Buck says of this remote bog on the Moose River. But bring a friend: one of the most successful tactics here is a small-scale deer drive to get bucks up and moving. Tracking also works well, especially during the rifle and muzzleloading seasons, when snow is almost a sure bet. Age is the primary factor in buck size: Thanks to light hunting pressure, bucks routinely reach 4 and 5 years old. Old haul roads crisscross the remarkably flat area, and scrubby red spruce and balsam firs provide most of the cover, with some hardwood slopes on the periphery. [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: South Dakota

    0

    By Scott Bestul

    Black Hills National Forest
    Location
    : southwest South Dakota
    Size: 1.2 million acres
    ZIP: 57730

    This national forest in hilly ponderosa pine country is so big one state can't contain it. The entire Black Hills portion in South Dakota offers ample whitetail opportunities, but the centrally located Deerfield Lake area in Pennington County, in particular, guarantees stunning scenery and lower hunting pressure. "It's tough hunting, because there aren't as many access roads," says Chuck Schlueter, communications manager for South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks. "But there are good deer populations and the views are hard to beat. It's a real quality hunt." Black Hills deer management plan changes that restricted hunting licenses have also led to a steady increase in hunter satisfaction since 1997, and harvest success has risen from 55 percent to 75 percent. [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: Alabama

    2

    By Scott Bestul

    Mulberry Fork Wildlife Management Area
    Location
    : central Alabama
    Size: 35,520 acres
    ZIP: 35579

    Quantity is finally catching up with quality at Mulberry. Since the state first leased this private land in 1995, good bucks have been the rule-mostly because deer numbers were so low. But as herd numbers have strengthened, buck quality hasn't slipped a bit. This hilly pine plantation features hardwood remnants on the steeper, harder to log sections, and the cover gets thick. "It's not as pretty to look at as a bottomland hardwoods area," Cook says, "but it holds a lot more deer and some of them are pretty good bucks."

    Sam R. Murphy Wildlife Management Area
    Location
    : northwest Alabama
    Size: 20,040 acres
    ZIP: 35563

    Try this leased pine plantation if your goal is to fill the freezer, but be prepared to tag a buck you can hang on the wall. Either sex hunts and no antler restrictions combined with healthy harvest numbers make this the most "wide open" of the state's high-quality WMAs, Cook says. Yet like Barbour and Mulberry, Murphy consistently ranks not only among the top 10 state lands for buck harvest, but also in the top third for trophy quality. "A lot of yearling bucks get killed... [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: Rhode Island

    2

    By Scott Bestul

    George Washington Management Area
    Location
    : northern Rhode Island
    Size: 3,200 acres
    ZIP: 02830

    The Ocean State's biggest bucks push 200 pounds, and many of them last year were taken from private land near Burrillville. The area is also home to the George Washington Management Area. Deer in these heavily forested rolling hills are dependent on mast crops and on early successional browse created by a management plan that aggressively cuts back forest. Focus on the cutbacks to pinpoint feeding activity. [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: Missouri

    0

    By Scott Bestul

    Lower Hamburg Bend Conservation Area
    Location
    : northeast Missouri
    Size: 2,265 acres
    ZIP: 51640

    Catastrophic floods in 1993 and 1995 caused private landowners to sell out, creating new public lands along the Missouri River north and west of Columbia. Lower Hamburg Bend, in Atchison County near Hamburg, Iowa, is one of the larger ones. The thick stands of cottonwood and willow that have taken over these fertile bottomlands make deer less vulnerable to hunting pressure, and mature bucks are starting to feel at home in these relatively small areas. The challenge is finding them in the dense cover. "It's tough hunting," Hansen says, "but deer numbers are high and the potential is there for some good bucks."

    Woodson K. Woods Memorial Conservation Area
    Location
    : central Missouri
    Size: 5,616 acres
    ZIP: 65559

    One of the state's most scenic public lands, Woods is also among the best archery-only deer hunting areas. The Meramec River and Dry Fork Creek flow through rugged Ozark hills, which are about 80 percent oak-history forest, and the state-owned conservation area near St. James also features some open bottomlands and a generous amount of food plots. Hunting pressure is significant, but the prohibition on firearms hunting means plenty of good bucks... [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: Kansas

    2

    By Scott Bestul

    Tuttle Creek Wildlife Area
    Location
    : northeast Kansas
    Size: 12,000 acres
    ZIP: 66411

    Think of nearby Tuttle Creek as Milford's tougher little brother. Offering a similar combination of hardwoods, native prairie, and wheat, milo and soybean fields around a man-made reservoir, Tuttle Creek's more rugged terrain and slightly higher elevations offset its smaller size. Toss in 60,000 acres of Walk-in Hunting Access (private land leased for public hunting by the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks) in four adjacent counties, and you've got a whitetail wonderland. A steeper watershed makes Tuttle Creek prone to flooding during fall rains, producing isolated islands among cattail sloughs where big bucks hide. "We haven't seen any 200-class deer in a couple of years," says Silovsky, "but they're here."

    Marais des Cygnes Wildlife Area
    Location
    : southeast Kansas
    Size: 7,600 acres
    ZIP: 66075

    The floodplain of the winding Marais des Cygnes River features some of the most extensive timber stands in this predominantly prairie state. Bottomland and upland woods mix with wetlands and cropfields. Southeastern Kansas receives twice as much rain as the western third of the state, and the steep bluffs and lush cover combined with an extensive refuge closed to hunting offer bucks lots of sanctuaries. However, the... [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: West Virginia

    0

    By Scott Bestul

    Panther State Forest
    Location
    : southern West Virginia
    Size: 7,810 acres
    ZIP: 24872

    "It's not great deer habitat, like you'd see along the Ohio River or southern Illinois, that makes these deer big," says Keith Krantz, a wildlife biologist for West Virginia Department of Natural Resources. "The main component of deer size in southern West Virginia is age." Much like R.D. Bailey, Panther's oak-hickory hardwoods are draped across extremely rugged terrain in McDowell County. Drops and rises between ridges range from 500 to 1,200 feet on average, and by all indications deer have taken advantage of the daunting climbs to live long and prosper.

    Bluestone Wildlife Management Area
    Location
    : southern West Virginia
    Size: 18,019 acres
    ZIP: 25951

    To be legal here, bucks must boast a minimum 14-inch spread. The antler restrictions started last year and drastically reduced the firearms harvest of immature bucks from 60 per year to 16. The steepest terrain borders the Bluestone River, with the bulk of the acreage made up of rolling uplands and flat bottomlands. In addition to food plots, 400 acres of forest openings and old fields are cut back to maximize browse. A late frost and a down year for mast suggest that the new crop of... [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    100 Best Public-Land Hunts: North Dakota

    2

    By Scott Bestul

    Sheyenne National Grassland
    Location: southeast North Dakota
    Size: 70,180 acres
    ZIP: 58054

    Prime whitetail range in North Dakota is north and east of the Missouri River, and the Sheyenne makes up that region's largest single plot of public land. One of the last remnants of tallgrass prairie in the state, these rolling sandhill grasslands are dotted with deer-sheltering stands of aspen and Russian olive. Riparian corridors along river bottoms may hold lots of whitetails, which raid nearby farmland planted in alfalfa, sunflower, soybeans and corn. Pay attention to boundaries: Private land is interspersed with the federal holdings and access can be hard to come by.

    PLOTS: Private Land Open to Sportsmen

    Only 5 percent of North Dakota is publicly owned, and nowhere is the dearth of hunting access felt more keenly than in the northeast. "There are lots of deer in the northeastern corner of the state, but most is private land," says Bill Jensen, deer biologist with North Dakota Game and Fish. "Much of it is being bought by nonresidential hunters, and people can't get access." The PLOTS (Private Land Open to Sportsmen) program leases private holdings-usually in 160 to 320-acre segments-and opens them to public hunting. Some 385 PLOTS sites covering 86,000... [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 24, 2007

    Your Hunting Habits

    1

    By Kim Hiss

          One of our recent gear winners, Tracy, just emailed me a discussion topic idea. She said:

          Darn it! I'm already addicted to hunting, do I really need to become addicted to blogging about hunting?

          Then she suggested we talk about:

          Bad habits. For example, I have been repeatedly accused of violating all sacred scent control laws. I try, I really do, but I'm guilty of cross-hunting my wardrobe and have gotten lectured for wearing my “deer bibs” on a very cold rabbit hunt (or worse - a pheasant hunt with the dogs!). Tips? Experiences? Ideas? Anyone tried the at-home scent control pointers in F&S (was it October or September maybe?)

          I'm going to expand Tracy’s topic by talking about hunting habits in general — good, bad, whatever. We’ve been touching on the subject a little lately anyway. Dana mentioned reading a romance novel in her ground blind, and ANewMe2B said she’s been known to listen to audio books and work on her grocery list. 
          For myself, I’ll admit to the habit of eating all my food way too early. It’s a silly weakness, but if there’s a snack close... [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 23, 2007

    BuckTracker: First Deer With a Bow

    2

    By Scott Bestul

    After several tense moments, the buck finally walked within 30 yards and gave Justin a shot. “I thought I hit him pretty well, and we came back to track him that evening but we lost the blood trail,” he said. “I spent a pretty sleepless night, but we found him the next morning. He was my first deer ever!”

    Justin was curious as to whether his monster deer would make Pope &Young. I assured him that the buck would have many inches to spare in that category! What a great first deer, and kudos to Justin for observing deer behavior and adjusting his stand site!

    Hunt Stats:
    Date: October 13, 2007
    Location: White County, Indiana
    Weight: 200 lbs., dressed
    Points: 13
    Green Score: unknown
    Weapon: Mathews bow
    Shot Distance: 30 yards
    Method: Tree stand [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 22, 2007

    Bill Heavey's Deer Diary: Keeping Track of Gear

    2

    By Bill Heavey

    Actually, I observed it. I watched a hunting buddy as he finished practicing before heading out for an afternoon hunt. He took the release off his wrist and then buckled it around a limb of his bow. This act was so simple, so effective, and so obviously something I never would have thought of that I felt like one of the last members of a rival hominid sub-species watching a homo sapiens flaking a spear head with which he planned to hunt me later that day.

    Strapping the release to the bow means that all you have to do from now on is find the bow. And bows, being bigger than releases, are proportionally easier to find. (Not that they can’t be lost, too. Trust me.)

    There is another piece of gear you never want to lose: yourself. If you head up into the trees, I personally recommend an exceedingly unglamorous bit of gear, the safety harness. You can kill a deer without one, of course. You may also kill yourself.

    Every year, a few guys choose this option. They tend to be younger men, mostly because such fellows are immortal. There is an old fable about this in the military in... [ Read Full Post ]

  • October 22, 2007

    Who's Your Hero?

    1

    By Kim Hiss

         There are plenty of villains in the sporting world. Anti-hunting activists, wrong-headed policy-makers, PETA members, poachers - it's easy to find people who give other hunters grief or hunting itself a bad name. Think about those negative influences too much, and it's hard not to worry about the future of the sport.
         So in the spirit of focusing on the positives, who are the heroes in your hunting life? Specifically the women you've met who have had a positive impact on your field career. Maybe a female guide taught you a great deal. Or a fellow sportswoman turned into the world's best hunting partner. Or perhaps a mother, friend, or workshop leader got you into hunting in the first place?
         I know I've grown from the experience and plain old enthusiasm of plenty of females I've met along the way. I can think of women in the outdoors industry and female guides whose knowledge and passion definitely helped me grow as a hunter. Although I personally don't know any one woman who's had an overwhelming impact on my own hunting life, I've spoken to other people who credit mothers, friends, and even daughters... [ Read Full Post ]