GROUSE HUNTING TRIPS SINCE 2008

CATEGORIES
YEAR
ARCHIVE TAGS
Ruffed grouse hunting in New Hampshire
Cold Snap
Those were some mighty big snowflakes coming down yesterday in New Hampshire's uplands. What started as merely a cold morning of grouse hunting became a moderate snow event in the afternoon. Thankfully, the blustery conditions only lasted a short time before the wind and snow settled down after a couple of hours.
Frost Fire Guide Service ruffed grouse hunting

Chris, with a beautiful male ruffed grouse that he just harvested under Dixie's steady point. It was a two grouse, two woodcock day for him, as his 28 gauge was deadly.

Frost Fire Guide Service ruffed grouse hunts

Scott, with his fifth ruffed grouse that he took in two days of hunting. He has Dixie to thank for an excellent point, and his 28 gauge for a well timed shot.

It was a much colder start for us yesterday than on Saturday. With temps in the low 20's and a brisk wind from the north, we made sure to keep moving all morning, usually uphill, just to stay warm. It took a while, but we finally started moving a few grouse behind Chris's Weimaraner Teddy after a couple of hours - they were probably hunkered down, waiting to start moving around in their daily schedule of feeding and resting until the temp had risen a bit.

Late in the morning, Scott's setter Dixie made another appearance, and she picked up right where she left off the day before. She was dynamite, contacting approximately nine birds
(5 grouse, 4 woodcock) in an hour and a half. She pointed the vast majority of them too, and provided Scott and Chris with many good opportunities. Both hunters scored on pointed grouse, and Chris also took two woodcock over her staunch points.

Here is where I need to interject a piece of information that may be relevant to some readers. Both Scott and Chris were using 28 gauge shotguns - Chris with his wonderful Fausti SxS and Scott with his O/U Rizzini. Both are light and easy to carry through a long day of grouse hunting and all that entails, and both hunters mounted them amazingly quickly when needed. They did manage to miss a few birds
(I don't want them to feel too good about themselves and their abilities), but they made far more than they missed, for sure.

They reminded me of another group of grouse hunters that I used to go out with long ago, and I remember also marveling at their grouse shooting abilities with the 28 gauge. The name of the grouse hunting game is shooting a gun that you're comfortable with, but there's a lot to be said for a light, quick-mounting shotgun that you can carry all day through the grouse woods. And, yes, I carry one on the rare occasions I get to hunt.

Our day concluded in the now thickening snow squall that suddenly appeared
(all of the images in this post are from the same day, believe it or not) with a run from Chris's Weimaraner "Monty". He did a good job for us, finding several grouse in his run, but his highlight was pointing a grouse in thick spruce cover with only one way to go. It had to fly downhill towards Chris, and apparently its acrobatics eluded Chris's attempt - a rare miss for his 28. We wrapped it up not long after that, cold, wet and tired.

This morning was even colder, with Chris and I leaving the trucks at a mere 18 degrees, and it took a couple of hours to warm up. Behind his dogs we managed to find a couple of woodcock and a grouse, so there are still a few timberdoodles around but we think this might be the stragglers of the annual migration. The majority have left our area, and we look forward to seeing them again next year. Even though there is a warming trend later this week, most of them have headed south and we'll be down to the nitty gritty of grouse only for the remainder of our season.

A few more days of hunting in New Hampshire
(the muzzleloader deer hunt starts this coming Saturday) and then we shift our focus to Vermont.

More updates to come ...
Back

2024: 189.0 Hours
VT Hours: 68.5
NH Hours: 120.5
VT Birds Moved: 171
NH Birds Moved: 389
Birds Taken:
24 Grouse (VT - 7, NH - 17)
41 Woodcock (VT - 12, NH - 29)

2023: 222.5 Hours
VT Hours: 65.5
NH Hours: 157.0
VT Birds Moved: 143
NH Birds Moved: 430
Birds Taken:
14 Grouse (VT - 4, NH - 10)
43 Woodcock (VT - 7, NH - 36)

2022: 123.0 Hours
VT Hours: 49.5
NH Hours: 73.5
VT Birds Moved: 96
NH Birds Moved: 178
Birds Taken:
11 Grouse (VT - 5, NH - 6)
6 Woodcock (VT - 2, NH - 4)

2021: 193.5 Hours
VT Hours: 66.0
NH Hours: 127.5
VT Birds Moved: 226
NH Birds Moved: 427
Birds Taken:
36 Grouse
21 Woodcock

2020: 199.5 Hours
VT Hours: 36.0
NH Hours: 163.5
VT Birds Moved: 77
NH Birds Moved: 552
Birds Taken:
24 Grouse
21 Woodcock

2019: 184.5 Hours
VT Hours: 28.0
NH Hours: 156.5
VT Birds Moved: 65
NH Birds Moved: 509
Birds Taken:
14 Grouse
29 Woodcock

2018: 144.0 Hours
VT Hours: 32.0
NH Hours: 112.0
VT Birds Moved: 114
NH Birds Moved: 417
Birds Taken:
18 Grouse
12 Woodcock

2017: 180.5 Hours
VT Hours: 44
NH Hours: 136.5
VT Birds moved: 110
NH Birds moved: 407
Birds Taken:
23 Grouse
24 Woodcock

2016: 178 Hours
Birds moved: 563
Birds/Hr Avg.: 3.16

Birds Taken:
23 Grouse
30 Woodcock

2015: 202.0 Hours
Birds moved: 607
Birds/Hr Avg.: 3.0

Birds Taken:
18 grouse
26 woodcock

2014: 138.0 hours
Birds moved: 350
Birds/hr. Avg.: 2.53

Birds Taken:
17 grouse
17 woodcock

2013: 152 Hours
Birds moved: 480
Birds/hr. Avg.: 3.15

Birds Taken:
20 grouse
27 woodcock

2012: 114 Hours
Birds moved: 526
Birds /Hr Avg.: 4.61

Birds Taken:
22 grouse
4 woodcock

2011: 161 Hours
Birds moved: 522
Birds / Hr Avg.: 3.24

Birds Taken:
34 grouse
21 woodcock

2010: 139.5 Hours
Birds moved: 430
Birds / Hr Avg.: 3.08

Birds Taken:
26 grouse
21 woodcock

2009: 93.5 Hours
Birds moved: 307
Birds / Hr Avg.: 3.28

Birds Taken:
16 grouse
14 woodcock

2008: 82.5 Hours
Birds moved: 188
Birds / Hr Avg.: 2.27

Birds Taken:
10 grouse
5 woodcock

frost-fire-logo-red