The
number of ruffed grouse was way up this past fall and the bird hunting the best in years.
What’s different?
There
are many reasons, probably much of it had to do with a warm dry spring. The young
broods prospered. Many of the grouse found
this past fall were in clusters, with sometimes a half dozen or more bursting
into the air one right after the other. Talk about an adrenaline rush.
Colby pointing a bird. |
One
thing that I haven’t heard mentioned, which has to have made a difference, is the
number of blowdowns. A year ago this past October a storm passed through our
area and knocked down thousands of trees scattered all over the countryside. Some
broke off, but more where uprooted. Fir trees made up the majority of them and
there is no better cover for a grouse than a dead fir tree lying on its side.
So
many times this past fall our dogs pointed grouse hiding in the shelter of a blown
down fir tree. On one of the last hunts of the season a friend’s setter locked
up on a horizontal fir and as the owner approached a bird flushed out the back.
Almost immediately another shot right back at him and over his head.
The
grouse might not have been always been under the trees, but they were often nearby.
One day, hunting up high next to a clear cut, a fat old fir tree that had blown down
caught my eye. On the way over to investigate it, my youngest wirehair locked
up on point in waist-high weeds. Three grouse exploded into the wide open space
with two zipping right past my head and offering no shot.
Colby bringing it home. |
Did
the abundance of knocked down fir trees make a difference in the number of
birds this past fall? I think so.