A Week in the Books
First off, as has been said before in the last few blog entries, this year's grouse numbers are way up. We've moved a considerable number of birds each day that we've been out there, even along the road edges. While it's been great, even I know that this can't continue. There will be a point, probably after the busy holiday weekend, where some of those birds along the roads learned the hard way to abandon the edge in favor of deeper woods. Those that aren't shot by hunters will inevitably seek the refuge of more out of the way places to exist. Eventually, they will move back toward the roads however, especially when the weather gets consistently cold, but we may experience a slow down of moving birds along the roads in the short term.
We have been encountering a sizable number of young birds that seem to be inexperienced in dealing with dogs and humans. We've had some terrific opportunities for shots, and one of my hunters made the most of it this week, limiting out two days in a row on grouse - most of those birds were young of the year. That is a rare feat for most grouse hunters, but that could be a distinct possibility in this year of plenty. Sharpen up on your reflexes and gun mount and perhaps you too can shoot a limit of ruffed grouse in 2020. We have also encountered our share of wily grouse too, so please don't be overconfident when venturing forth to the grouse woods ...
I always try to note the flight of a woodcock that we might encounter. A lazy, fluttering and failing flight usually indicates a bird that is tired out from migrating. A strong, high flight might be one of our native birds, or a recharged bird that has spent some time here on its way south. The weather was the coldest of the season last night, but we have some mild weather coming this week. There should be plenty of woodcock coming through here shortly.
The rare "upland limit" - four grouse and three woodcock