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April to August, then nothing? Hmmmmm. Sounds more like Ground Squirrels than Prairie Dogs. Ground Squirrels spend most of the year hibernating. I wonder . . . when folks on this site say "prairie dogs", are they in fact referring to ground squirrels? If so, and it is really ground squirrels that you are after, send me a PM (or better yet, and ...
you can go to hodgons and they will show you the velocity of both but you are spot on the 204 would be less drift 4 sure 204 hands down and alot alot alot more knock down with the 204 than the 17 fireball.
Looking to talk with anyone who's done a Mule Deer hunt in the wilderness areas of Idaho. I'm looking at the Sawtooth and White Cloud Wilderness areas and would love to ask a few questions before deciding which area to scout this summer.
The old man is looking into booking a Dall sheep hunt this fall. I was wondering if anyone has been on a hunt and if you had any guide recommendations for him.
Hey all. I wish it weren’t so, but Bull hunts in the cascades have become de facto OIL tags. I’ve drawn the Goose Prairie Modern Firearm tag with 18 points and I suspect I won’t ever again, I’m 52. This is the “bull” tag, not quality. I’ve not been a consistent elk hunter because of the spike only reg.
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Not unusual at all for a young dog to stick close to the owner the first year. I'd look to get out in the field with others who have seasoned dogs. Your dog will learn from them. Best thing for your dog this year is getting him on scent as many times as possible. Don't have too high of expectations for the first year. Your pup will do fine in time.
Its going to really crowd the other areas down low. Its already busy down low with all the road hunters. Im sure you will see some elk running by with there tongues hanging out due to all the pressure.
what kind of dogs do you have? If you don't have hounds, I think that is going to be compelling. I mean for the most part, I think hunting a bear with a dog or two that is not a hound, would actually be an impediment.
The researchers would walk the dogs down the line of boxes and if the dog detected CWD, it would sit. Random chance in this scenario is one in five, or 20 percent. During testing with rewards like treats or toys, the dogs were 90 percent accurate at identifying the CWD-positive sample.