Turkey hunting could be dicey this year | The Columbus Dispatch
April 9, 2012
Spring’s early arrival makes spotting prey more difficult
Good neighbor Jim wasn’t exactly complaining the other day as much as just saying that the gobbler season in Ohio arrives too late for optimum hunting.
This after the guy next door said he’d seen a wild turkey in full fan that very morning in March.
“Yeah, the gobblers are out there strutting,” said Jim, who was standing outside in shirtsleeves, though April was a day away.
Asparagus was shooting up from a row nearby, and a couple of peach trees had bloomed and faded, hopefully pollinated by whatever bees survive pesticidal assault. Nature was tossing freakishly warm, but temperature had little bearing on Jim’s point.
“By the time the season starts, the hens are already on their nests,” he said.
Jim’s suggestion was clear: Callers mimicking hot hens in order to drive amorous turkeys in their direction are about as likely to get the desired results in late April and May as do young men honking their horns in an emptying parking lot at closing time.
Hunter experience notwithstanding, the biologists at the Ohio Division of Wildlife believe they have this figured out.
The length of daylight choreographs the hormonal calypso that awakens wild turkey lust. Thus, the balminess of March and, perhaps, of April isn’t likely to throw Ohio’s 200,000 or so gobblers and hens off their dance steps. The premature sprouting of trees and undergrowth, though, can make hunter and hunted less likely to find each other.
The hunt begins on April 23 and runs through May 20, with the youth season scheduled for April 21-22. Click Link Below For Full Story!
via Turkey hunting could be dicey this year | The Columbus Dispatch.
Turkeys are in midseason form, but 2012 hunt won’t get started until Saturday | The Courier-Journal
April 9, 2012

This year’s warm, generally dry spring weather could have turkeys running ahead of schedule in their breeding activity. Hunters should adjust their tactics accordingly. / KDFWR photo
By Gary Garth | Special to The Courier-Journal
Steven Dobey was pretty sure he knew that Kentucky’s 90,000 or so turkey hunters are a determined, dedicated and tenacious group, both in their efforts to protect the resource and their skill in bringing a bird home. But last year’s recorded spring kill of 32,191 birds erased any doubts he might have had. Not that 2011 was a record season. It wasn’t. That came in 2010 when hunters bagged 36,097 turkeys.
But last year’s spring hunt was wet. Soaking wet, with record rains and record flooding. Wet weather and successful turkey hunting don’t often go hand in hand.
“It was very wet last year, and we killed 32,191 birds,” said Dobey, the turkey program coordinator for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources and a hunter himself. “That told me that the drive of our turkey hunters is undeterred. That was a testament to their determination.
“I hunted opening morning and was lucky enough to harvest a bird. It had been raining but stopped, then started raining later that morning. And then it seemed like it rained every day the rest of the season.”
It didn’t actually rain every day of last year’s 23-day hunt, but rain did fall during most of the season, leaving hunting conditions ranging from challenging to miserable. Click Link Below For Full Story!
2011 Michigan Deer Hunting Forecast
October 4, 2011
2011 MICHIGAN DEER HUNTING PROSPECTS
THE STATEWIDE FORECAST
Brent Rudolph, Deer and Elk Program Leader
517-641-4903 ext. 248
Statewide
Over the last few years, around 700,000 individuals have purchased a license to hunt deer in
Michigan. These hunters ultimately spend more than 9.6 million days afield and take more than
400,000 deer. Over 300,000 hunters participate in Michigan’s archery season, about 600,000 hunt
with a firearm and 200,000 with a muzzleloader. While the number of firearm season hunters often
rises and falls as the traditional November 15th opening day rotates through days of the week,
expanded youth hunting programs and crossbow hunting opportunities have increased
participation among other segments of the hunting population. Although surveys show that the
leading reasons many participate in deer hunting is simply the opportunity to spend time outdoors
with friends and family, many hunters prepare each season to give themselves the best chance to
see and take deer.
Deer are not evenly distributed across the state. There are considerable differences in habitat and
deer numbers across Michigan’s three regions – the Upper Peninsula (UP), northern Lower
Peninsula (NLP), and southern Lower Peninsula (SLP). In addition to this regional variability, every
year hunters only a few miles apart have very different experiences observing and harvesting deer.
Across the state, reports on the soft mast crop are generally positive, with particularly good
production of apples. The hard mast crop has shown low production overall, though some
scattered areas have noted fair amounts of acorns and beechnuts. Maps and computer-based
tools are increasingly available to narrow in on the best locations to focus scouting efforts,
including the Mi-HUNT interactive web application available at www.michigan.gov/mihunt. While
these and other resources are a great benefit for hunters, there is no substitute for personally
scouting areas in advance of a hunting trip.
Part of hunting preparations each year includes becoming familiar with the most recent regulations.
The deer website of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and a new collaborative
website with the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife at Michigan State University provide
highlights of regulations changes, information about deer management, and links to additional
resources, such as a list of deer check stations. These sites are located at www.michigan.gov/deer
and http://deer.fw.msu.edu. Please refer to the 2011 Hunting and Trapping Digest and Antlerless
Digest, available at DNR Operations Service Centers, license vendors, or available in electronic
formats through links at these sites, for a map of all Deer Management Units and other regulations
details.
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The DNR also reminds hunters not to overlook the many other hunting and trapping seasons
available in Michigan. These other seasons provide their own unique opportunities and can offer
chances to scout or find potential new deer hunting locations. Explore your options at
www.michigan.gov/hunting or www.michigan.gov/trapping. With preparation, attention to safety,
and awareness of current hunting regulations, hunters can be ready to head into the field to enjoy
the recreation opportunity offered by the 2011 Michigan deer season.
As an important reminder, those hunting within the UP and the multi-county Deer Management
Unit (DMU) 487 in the tuberculosis (TB) zone must decide, before purchasing their deer license, if
they wish the opportunity to take one or two antlered deer. Those desiring the opportunity to shoot
two bucks must purchase a combination license. Both bucks have antler point restrictions. One
buck must have one antler with at least 3 antler points; the other buck must have one antler with at
least 4 antler points. Those choosing to purchase a firearm deer license and/or an archery deer
license are limited to taking only one buck from within these areas during all seasons combined.
Within most of the areas, a deer must have just one antler 3 or more inches in length, but point
restrictions remain in place for some individual DMUs as well. These include DMU 117 (Drummond
Island) and DMU 122 (primarily in southern Dickinson County, along the Wisconsin border) in the
UP, and one small DMU (DMU135 in Iosco County) in the TB zone. In DMU 117, bucks must have
at least one forked antler. In DMU 122 bucks must have at least one three-point antler. And in
DMU 135, bucks must have at least one forked antler to be legal. Finally, within DMU 487 ONLY,
hunters may harvest an antlerless deer with a firearm or combination license within the Nov. 15-30
firearm season or the Dec. 9-18 muzzleloader season.
Upper Peninsula
More than 100,000 hunters have pursued deer in the UP in recent years, including approximately
30,000 participants in the archery season, over 90,000 firearm hunters, and more than 20,000
hunters pursuing deer with a muzzleloader.
Within the UP, deer populations continue to slowly increase following a second mild winter in a
row. Fawn production should be good, though predation may have produced some losses.
Antlered buck numbers will likely be on the rise, as the increased production of fawns in 2010
should lead to greater antlered buck numbers this year. More deer will be found in the Southern
UP near Lake Michigan, with fewer in the Northern UP near Lake Superior. Antlerless licenses are
available in DMUs 022, 055, 122, 152, 155, 252, and 255 for 2011. Special buck harvest
restrictions noted above are in place throughout the UP.
Northern Lower Peninsula
An average of about 285,000 hunters have pursued deer in the NLP over the last few years,
including more than 115,000 participants in the archery season, an average of over 250,000
firearm hunters, and more than 50,000 hunters pursuing deer with a muzzleloader.
Baiting has been reinstated as legal for most of the NLP; however, baiting is still banned in DMU
487. Baiting may only occur from October 1 through January 1. Hunters are restricted to no more
than 2 gallons of bait per hunting site; the bait must be spread over 100 square feet (equivalent to
a 10 foot by 10 foot area).
Within the eastern portion of the NLP, TB prevalence continues to show a declining trend over the
long-term, but no detectable change has occurred over the previous 5 years. Goals and hunting
regulations in the eastern NLP are therefore driven more by the objective to continue to reduce TB
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prevalence than by numbers of deer in this region. It is important for hunters to continue to observe
the ban on baiting and feeding in DMU 487 and to harvest at least as many antlerless deer as
bucks.
Mild winter conditions for the second year in a row in the NLP should lead to increasing deer
numbers. Deer numbers on many state land areas appear to be on the rise, though they are still
below goal in some areas. In some NLP units, indications are that there is an overabundance of
deer on private land but lower than desired populations on public land. Special antlerless seasons
and private land license quotas are used in these units to target deer on private land even if
abundant sign and sightings do not occur on public land. The number of antlerless deer licenses is
the same as last year in eastern NLP multi-unit area DMU 487, while no antlerless permits were
made available in four counties (Cheboygan, Otsego, Roscommon, and Kalkaska). Special buck
harvest restrictions noted above are in place in DMU 487. Within DMU 487 ONLY, hunters may
harvest an antlerless deer with a firearm or combination license within the Nov. 15-30 firearm
season or the Dec. 9-18 muzzleloader season.
Southern Lower Peninsula
An average of nearly 360,000 hunters have pursued deer in the SLP over the last few years,
including more than 185,000 participants in the archery season, more than 290,000 firearm
hunters, and an average of about 125,000 hunters pursuing deer with a muzzleloader.
Baiting has been reinstated as legal throughout the SLP. Baiting may only occur from October 1
through January 1. Hunters are restricted to no more than 2 gallons of bait per hunting site spread
over 100 square feet (equivalent to a 10 foot by 10 foot area).
The deer population in southern Michigan is expected to be similar to the last few years. Abundant
food and cover in the form of agricultural crops and scattered swamps and woodlots provide very
good habitat across the southern Michigan landscape. This high quality habitat, combined with
relatively mild winter conditions, results in an abundant and productive deer population. Deer
populations generally exceed DNR goals and fawns generally come in sets of twins and triplets.
High numbers of antlerless permits are available again this year, particularly in the multi-county
DMU 486 (most of southern Michigan except St. Clair, Macomb, Wayne, and Monroe Counties).
Elk Hunt Forecast for 2009- RMEF
August 24, 2009
| MISSOULA, Mont.—Elk and elk hunting opportunities are plentiful across the U.S. and Canada, and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation has just released its annual roundup of hunt forecasts for 27 states and provinces, newly posted at www.rmef.org.
“Elk herds are in great shape across most of the West, thanks to a mild winter and normal moisture. And, of course, the ongoing habitat stewardship projects supported by our members and volunteers have helped, too,” said David Allen, president and CEO of the Elk Foundation. This summer, RMEF passed the 5.6 million acre mark for elk habitat conserved or enhanced. Storylines within the Elk Foundation’s 2009 elk hunt forecast include the amazing herd growth following elk restoration efforts in Kentucky, wolf impacts on elk and hunting in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming, massive elk populations in Colorado and the trophy bull reputations of Arizona and Utah. Here’s a condensed look at forecasts from top states and provinces for total elk populations. To see all the reports in their entirety, including contact information for respective conservation agencies, visit www.rmef.org. For even more hutning including sidebars, see the Sept./Oct. 2009 edition of the RMEF member magazine, Bugle. Alberta Arizona British Columbia California Colorado Idaho Kentucky Montana Nevada New Mexico Oregon Saskatchewan Utah Washington Wyoming One of the most notable changes in elk country for 2009 could be a wolf hunt in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. Stay tuned to the respective state wildlife agencies for news and details. RMEF is a vocal supporter of state-regulated hunting to manage restored populations of gray wolves. For more info, visit www.rmef.org. |

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