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02-22-2014, 07:16 PM | #3 | ||||||
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RG are definitely sparse in Georgia. You wont find them on flat ground. Seldom below 3000 ft in the mtns. You do well to flush a bird per hour. Thinking about it, I think you are right about the migration. They were probably here and gone before our season started.
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Will makes some excellent points and I agree with all of them. - Dean Romig 03-13-2013 |
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02-22-2014, 07:44 PM | #4 | ||||||
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I sure hope they don't get up this way too soon or they'll be probing for worms through a foot of hard frozen snow.
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02-23-2014, 08:02 AM | #5 | ||||||
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Spring is a very long way off here also
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02-23-2014, 10:38 AM | #6 | ||||||
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Maybe they are Pennsylvania Birds on their way home ,I haven't run into any yet but it shouldn't be too long ! Last week we had 18 inches of snow on the ground now we have grass showing in the spring seeps ,SPRINGS ACOMIN I hope !
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02-23-2014, 02:23 PM | #7 | ||||||
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Well, 2 weeks ago when weather was frigid and a foot of snow on the ground, they were back in eastrn Ohio. Always are despite the weather.
I was on a local nature talk radio yesterday and reported this and the host said that friends of his had already reported them back in Cape May, NJ. Speaking of unusual --this morning while checking my emails, 28 deer came into my yard outside the kitchen window. Now, I live in the country with a farm bordering m y back yard and a several thousand acre park (Ogelbay) on the other side of the road, but I have never seen that many deer at one time and all in my yard.
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"How kind it is that most of us will never know when we have fired our last shot"--Nash Buckingham |
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02-23-2014, 02:27 PM | #8 | ||||||
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Harold ,are you feeding them or did they just drop by for a visit ?
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02-23-2014, 03:21 PM | #9 | ||||||
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Probable easer for the deer to eat your roses buds and grass than to forage for food in the woods with all the snow.
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02-23-2014, 03:33 PM | #10 | ||||||
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Wayne,
You're right. The deer in my area in Northern Delaware are doing just that. We've been finding them at all times of the day slipping into yards to brouse on shrubs. If someones dogs get started barking they just slip into another yard or back into the treeline of the woods Jack Kuzepski |
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