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03-01-2013, 04:13 PM | #3 | ||||||
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less adventurous here
If is was dreaming My setters and I go to meet the Woodcock as they set off from the maritimes, migrate with them picking up Grouse in the north and adding quail after getting south of of the frost line. i read about the old timers like Dr. Norris over a hundred years ago traveling with their sport of course - we all imagine or selves as the sport, not the pullman attendent or sharecropper
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"If there is a heaven it must have thinning aspen gold, and flighting woodcock, and a bird dog" GBE |
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03-01-2013, 04:40 PM | #4 | ||||||
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I'd be hunting grouse and woodcock with my grandfather and dad over a brace of english setters in New Hampshire.
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03-01-2013, 04:42 PM | #5 | ||||||
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i take my 8 and 10 gas and go hunt the mississippi flyway in about 1890 s time period... charlie
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03-01-2013, 04:44 PM | #6 | ||||||
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Harold that house in Channing is open to you anytime during bird season and beyond
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03-02-2013, 07:47 AM | #7 | ||||||
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How about starting out on the plains of Montana chasing huns and sharptails in September and cotinuing on thru the Dakotas. By early Oct, I would be in Minnesota hunting grouse and woodcock, I,d stop at Grand Rapids, Min. for the National Grouse and Woodcock Hunt, I've been a guide there before and have b.een the chairman of the Upper Ohio Valley Chapter for 28 years.
By mid Oct, I'd be in the UP and stay there until the season ended or the weather ran me out. I would then need a couple weeks of R and R, to rest the dogs of course. In Jan., Kansas for ringnecks and quail would be the order. The next year, I might start out in Nova Scotia, then drop down into maine and over to Hew Hampshire and Vermont, or one could stay in Montana and hunt the plains and then to the mountains for ruffs and blue grouse. As you can see, I've thought about this before. I am going to need at least one more dog. What guns would I take, well thats a whole new thread! |
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Harold Lee Pickens For Your Post: |
03-02-2013, 08:33 AM | #8 | ||||||
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Harold;
Have guns, dogs, will travel. That's exactly what I've always dreamed about doing once I leave the world of the working man and retire. To me it would be the grand slam of bird hunting. I'd like to bag a different species of bird with a different Parker (or Fox) just for the fun of it. |
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03-02-2013, 09:03 AM | #9 | ||||||
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Daryl, I hope to be able to do this within a couple of years. I have been an optometrist for 30 years now. I will be 59 in April, and probably need to work a couple more years.
Thats a good looking lab in your Avatar. Although I am a setter man, a good lab is hard to beat especially on pheasants. My best friend had a lab, and we routinely hunted it with my setters on grouse and woodcock. It figured out real quick that when the beeper collar went off, ther was a bird in front of my dogs. On running and or crippled birds, especially pheasants, it excelled. Unfortunately, Cowboy has passed. |
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03-02-2013, 12:54 PM | #10 | ||||||
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Harold I will drive, have a suburban so all will be comfortable. I just bought a 32' tag along camper to hunt the North Maine woods as I am usually 2 hrs. from a gas pump when bird hunting Maine...little set back on camper had it two months...never used it and tree came down and totaled it...good thing is had insurance on it. New Brunswick has the highest bird numbers I ever seen the last few years and all the ground you could ever imgine to hunt.
Only seven months till Woodcock season in NB.
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" We give a dog time we can spare, space we can spare and love we can spare. And in return, our dog gives us their all. It's the best darn deal man has ever made." M. Acklam |
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The Following User Says Thank You to E Robert Fabian For Your Post: |
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