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05-16-2024, 10:19 AM | #3 | ||||||
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"State Game Lands" are all over Pennsylvania. Open to the public, free access, and stocked Pheasants. The map is available, again, free. I don't use them because I can't walk and lost my Wirehair a few years ago.
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The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post: |
05-16-2024, 10:40 AM | #4 | ||||||
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Victor and Bill have great advice. Mine is to also save hard for an early retirement, but hunt every chance you can until then. At first you'll be hunting for places to hunt (and it seems there are quite a few in PA). Once you find some covers and coverts, name them, love them, and treat them well with that new pup Victor just suggested you get.
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"Doubtless the good Lord could have made a better game bird than bobwhite, and better country to hunt him in...but equally doubtless, he never did." -- Guy de la Valdene (from A Handful of Feathers ) "'I promise you,' he said, 'on my word of honor, I won't die on the opening of the bird season.'" -- Robert Ruark (from The Old Man and the Boy) |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Garry L Gordon For Your Post: |
06-02-2024, 07:27 AM | #5 | |||||||
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Ahhhh, will load a few more photos later, just have to take them. Edit done Just had an email about 'hunting from a vehicle' in Pa. First, I don't join the throngs hunting the stocked birds on State Game Lands, and the debate rages on: Motorized wheel chairs 'are not considered vehicles' in Pa. but certain Wardens, mostlly young fellows, say they are, so I am applying for a 'permit to hunt from a vehicle'. Never an issue on regulated shooting grounds. But, you never know! These buggies were designed for Wounded Warriors, which I am not, just severely handicapped when it comes to walking, the result of a broken back back in '14, that's acting worse these days. Check out one of the worlds best after the hunt retrievers, so I guess I have another project; teaching one of mine to do the same. |
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The Following 13 Users Say Thank You to Tom Kidd For Your Post: |
05-16-2024, 11:15 AM | #6 | ||||||
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Networking. Find a local hunting dog club- there are many. Some clubs focus on one breed, some on type (pointers, retrievers, versatile etc). My preferred is the North American Versatile Hunting Dog Association (NAVHDA) which has 90+ clubs in the US and Canada. I have been a member for a little over 10 years. Even if you do not own a dog attend local events which are almost always on weekends for working folks. Speak to a club officer and offer to volunteer to assist with a training day or test day. You will meet men and women who love dogs and a majority who hunt. Get to know them. Through this networking you will learn about different upland opportunities, how others manage a busy work life yet raise and train their own dogs. You will likely find breeders with some well bred dogs and proven track records. I have made some great friends over the years. And I've even had some sweet new coverts shared with me. It's just a thought...
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The Following User Says Thank You to Chris Pope For Your Post: |
05-16-2024, 09:15 PM | #7 | ||||||
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Ian, I can’t speak to Pennsylvania but down here if you want to set up a course with several very small food plots where you can put out quail, chukar or pheasants to train your bird dog, you’d need around 150 contiguous acres. The course can be laid out to be around 45 minutes on foot, 30 minutes off horseback, without finds.
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"Life is short and you're dead an awful long time." Destry L. Hoffard "Oh Christ, just shoot the damn thing." Destry L. Hoffard |
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06-01-2024, 10:47 AM | #8 | ||||||
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This post is exactly where I was ten years back. It is a tough sport to break into starting from scratch. Plenty of great advice above and i will share with you my experience. I grew up hunting with people who had solved all these problems for me...then suddenly it all stopped. I didnt hunt for probably 25+ years. I wanted to re engage with it but had no land and no dogs and an old gun.
I thought about it a few seasons and then i decided to move forward come what may. I picked English Springer Spaniels for the dogs and they have been great for us. Great size, smart, perfect for bird hunting in grass and cover. I took them to a specialized trainer and just admitted I knew nothing and we all started on the ground floor. It took a lot of evenings and weekends but it was a fun and rewarding process to get the dogs up to speed. There was no hope we could buy up a bunch of land.. so a buddy took me to a private preserve and that was the best next step. Hunting public land after a few weeks into the season was not going to yield much and you dont want bored dogs and bored hunters. For a membership and approx $25 a pheasant and $15 for quail you get a great afternoon for a few hundred dollars. Dogs are happy, hunters are happy, and you clean up and head home. I highly recommend this as a way to get started. Sure its cheating a bit with planted birds but you and the dogs still have to find them and the goal is to have a fun afternoon. Two last thoughts: enjoy the process. enjoy running your dogs, getting out daily for a walk , training your dogs etc. you do that daily and then hunt a few times a season. Trust people to help. i have found that the seasoned hunters and people at the private preserves are really pretty happy to get new people going - i just admit i'm new and open to advice. Getting the dogs heading into my 50's was the best thing i did. i hope you move forward and it works out for you. these were not shot with Parkers but I intend to change that this year. |
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The Following 10 Users Say Thank You to David Safris For Your Post: |
06-01-2024, 06:14 PM | #9 | ||||||
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Contact S&M game farm, a private hunting facility east of Gettysburg. It is a membership club with ownership shares coming available occasionally.
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06-01-2024, 10:10 PM | #10 | |||||||
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A different time, a different place, a different era. My father was not rich by any means, didn’t even own property at all when growing up, rented a small house on 400 acres of land (and we only had access to a small portion of that), and hunting wasn’t even allowed on that land. But my father knew folks, knew where to go to get access on private land, knew when and where public land was stocked, had a lifestyle at least somewhat conducive to having dogs and the rented land to have a few. Even if you could have all that, times have changed. My neighbors are much closer, wouldn’t tolerate a barking dog for long, many would bristle at the sight of a firearm, and despite all that, my father somewhat regularly would come home with a grouse or woodcock. No more. Due to the scarcity of them now, he will never take one again, nor will I. Amazingly, being not where I grew up, I know an amazingly small selection of folks, friends at Rod & Gun clubs are more likely to be there for a cheap beer rather than swap hunting yarns and if they have access to great areas to hunt—their lips are sealed. I have gone out for whitetail deer on state land about 3 to 5 days a year and haven’t even had a shot at one. I jumped one a few years ago, haven’t seen one since. A different time…a different place. Growing up, if I didn’t shoot at least one whitetail deer a year I felt like a failure. |
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