Thursday, May 24, 2012

Bowhunting Junkies

113 days till deer season. Most of us are already looking forward to the upcoming season, and those who aren't will be as soon as they start seeing bucks in our area with those magical velvet racks on their head. Whitetail bowhunting is a year-round sport, even if for most of us its just in our minds. As soon as one year's season ends the preparation for the next begins. After spring turkey season ends and the crappie just aren't biting as good as they once did, the only thing left to do is dream about big bucks. Most of us bowhunting junkies will spend a months salary and log a hundred hours preparing long before opening morning is even here. I know I will be losing sleep over the whole thing by mid-summer. There is a list a mile long that we all will do this summer to try and calm the anxiety, and most of which will be to no avail. It's going to be a long summer and I hope by now you've at least took some frustration out on a savvy old longbeard or have a good stockpile of fish fillets in the freezer, maybe even picked up a shed or two. Maybe you're working on getting that retriever or pointer back in shape to keep your mind off things. Maybe you're just trying to relax and watch all your old favorite hunting videos and not think about the fact that there's 113 days until next deer season. All of this my friends will work for a while, but sooner or later we all will come to that point of no return. The point where from now until opening day you will eat, sleep, and live for the anticipation of coming to full-draw on your first deer of the season. Much to Arkansas' bowhunting junkies' pleasant surprise, we get to sit in a stand a couple weeks earlier this year which will definitely help us get through the long summer, but won't be a saving grace. If you have the luxury of hunting private land, you can spend your time cultivating food plots or perhaps filling feeders. Try getting your soil tested and read some articles on the best things to plant to help the deer herd in your area. Watch your old favorite hunting video again. Put out as many game cameras as you can afford and check them weekly. Caution: depending on what shows up on camera may make your condition worse. Compare pictures with the deer seen the year before and judge how many inches they may have gained or what deer are still on the property. Decide what bucks to put on the hit list and start contemplating how many does you want to exterminate off the property this year. These are all things we as bowhunting junkies must do, we think it will help. Wrong. It will only make the dog days of summer drag longer. If you hunt public land, use any resources you have available to you. If you have never done so, try getting topo or satellite maps of the areas you hunt and go through them with a fine tooth comb until you find a few new spots to check out this year. Refer to your logs from last year and think about where all the other trucks were parked, find that one honey-hole that nobody's found yet! Watch your old favorite hunting video, again. Find the early season food and get prepared. Look at public land hunting like a contest, go the extra mile farther than the other guy. You want that pope and young buck more than the next guy, so go scout his bedroom and dinner table and put a tag on him this year. All these things will help you stay busy this summer, but they wont calm the anxiety or help you sleep any better. For bowhunting junkies, summer is the longest, hardest season of them all. We will shoot our beloved bows until its second nature. You will play every scenario over and over in your head. You will watch your old favorite hunting video, again. Being a bowhunting junkie isn't easy. We can only dream and scout and prepare so much. It will be a drain on your wallet, your heart, and your time. Luckily, all it will take is being 20 feet up in a tree and seeing that opening day sunrise to make all the anxious hours worth it. Until then we will all live for that moment. Good luck and good shooting!

Friday, May 4, 2012

Turkey Season Memories

Many of my best thinking comes from while in the woods. Most outdoorsmen will agree that there is no better way to clear your head than to get back to nature. This was an extremely hot and tough turkey season for most hunters, atleast in my neck of the woods. With turkey tags harder to fill than ever, its tough to not get discouraged in the spring woods. Guys i know that did kill turkeys had to dig deep in their bag of tricks to do so. To me, springtime is one of the best times of year, no matter how many crappie i catch or turkeys i hear gobble. The fun is being outdoors, in pursuit of the game of your choice. The old saying, "a bad day of hunting beats a good day of work" has never been more true. I am so thankful to live in a place that i am able to hunt and fish as much as i'd like (which is too often in most eyes). I love to shoot a big old gobbler as much as anyone and sometimes i think thats all i'm really good at but when its all said and done the memories you make with friends and family are the real reason we all hunt. There are those memories that we all have we'll never forget. One side of me is the most hardcore hunter you'll ever meet who loves to hunt nonstop and will not be satisfied unless he tags out in several states and kills more than anyone else. He lives for outsmarting animals and the challenge is all the fun. But the truth is, the things that really matter are the memories made. Years from now it wont matter how big of bird you killed or even how many, But the few rare hunts that were special to you for whatever the reason may be will always stick with you. Maybe it was the first bird you ever killed, or maybe the first time your dad ever took you hunting. Maybe it was a special morning when the woods came alive and there seemed to be a turkey under every tree. Maybe it was one old smart bird you finally got the best of, or maybe the last hunt with an old friend you rarely even talk to these days. For me, some of those spring mornings spent sitting on a rock in the middle of nowhere, thanking God for what he's blessed me with, all the while listening for a turkey that never makes a sound will be the mornings i'll live for. Take some time this spring to make some of those memories you'll never forget, i think you'll find yourself smiling when you remember the people you were with or the emotions in your heart long after you've forgotten just how big that turkey was or how many you put your tag on that year.

While most of my blogs will be more informative on just how you can become better in your outdoor pursuits, this was just what was on my mind this spring. Thanks for reading, good luck and good shooting.