Wildlife Callers

Mountain Lion Preseason Scouting – Young Cougar (video)

 

Using the off season to locate mountain lions is critical to calling them in the fall.

 

I have already covered this topic in an earlier blog post http://www.wildlifecallers.com/blog/2009/08/19/ but wanted to share this video of a young mountain lion we captured on a trail camera. Finding actual sign (tracks) in the area was difficult due to the rocky wash bottom cutting through this canyon. However, using our knowledge from prior field research and interviews with lion hunters like Steve Craig and Jonathan Kibler, Dave and I knew that putting a camera in the area was a good idea. Excuse the quality level, this clip was taken on one of our trail cams, also, notice the skunk dive into the brush as the lion approaches.
 

 

 This is a fairly small lion and won’t make our ‘harvest list” for a couple more years. We will be calling in and around the area to try and get this lion called in and captured on film. If you want to call lions, you gotta know where they are.

One more place to try…

Best regards,

Mark Healy

mark@wildlifecallers.com

 

Idaho Wolf Hunt-Some Basic Tactics

 

This article is from Idaho Statesman.com today.  I know we have some readers in Idaho, or others that might be planning on a wolf hunt, wanted to pass on some info.

 

Wolf hunting tactics: Know your quarry

 

Despite what the experts say about the difficulty of wolf hunting, you still want to do it?

Luckily for you, the experts have decades of experience hunting and trapping wolves, and they’re willing to share their knowledge.

Use your ears to locate them. “The biggest giveaway with wolves is their howling,” said Carter Niemeyer, who traps wolves for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game.

Wolves howl in the evenings and early mornings. It gives you a good idea of where they are at that moment.

Wolves are fast and quick. If you locate where they are howling, you can form a strategy to call them within gun range.

If you set up in a random spot and start calling, odds are slim a wolf will show up.

Calling is your best bet. “Anything that makes a squeal. A young animal in distress is the key sound,” said Becky Schwanke, a wolf biologist and hunter in Glennallen, Alaska. “Get a good vantage spot and squeal away.”

Rick Kinmon, an Alaska hunting guide who targets wolves, said he often uses a combination of a distressed animal call and wolf howl, that way you’re appealing to their sense of opportunism for an easy meal and posing as another wolf challenging their territory.

Respect their senses. Wolves have excellent eyesight, hearing and sense of smell and know how to use them to protect themselves. “Those things are unbelievably intelligent, and that’s the biggest hurdle hunters are going to face,” Schwanke said.

Monitor the wind direction, wear camo and be stealthy when approaching your calling spot.

 Expect long shots at moving animals. Kinmon has called in about 200 wolves, and most were long shots of several hundred yards or more. Only two were standing still.

Kinmon said wolves will often stop well out of gun range of the caller, so he positions his hunters in front of the spot where he’s calling and hopes they will intercept a wolf investigating the call.

Be prepared at all times. Whether stalking or calling, wolves aren’t going to present themselves for a shot for very long.

“You’re going to get one quick chance and it’s over, and it’s over for the whole pack,” he said.

Winter is better than fall. “The best opportunity for wolves is winter, because there are tracks, just like mountain lions,” Schwanke said.

Winter usually concentrates deer and elk populations, and wolves follow. (Note: It’s illegal to hunt wolves within a half-mile of any active Fish and Game feeding station.)

Winter also is the best time for wolf pelts. Niemeyer said hunters who are serious about getting a wolf as a trophy should hold off until the winter months, when young wolves, which are the most likely to be shot, have grown larger and all wolves have put on their prime winter pelts.

He said a young wolf shot early in the season is going to be about the size of big coyote and have a poor-quality pelt.

Don’t expect them to be in the same spot twice. “They can go 15 to 20 miles in a night, no problem,” Niemeyer said.

 Don’t overestimate their size. Wolves are smaller targets than they might appear. It’s easy to misjudge the distance and shoot over them. You probably won’t have time to use a range finder, so take their small size into account.

Hunt ethically. Some Idaho hunters are frustrated with wolves and convinced they’re harming deer and elk herds. So the state will be under intense scrutiny during the first wolf season.

“I hope hunters will represent themselves with dignity and be good role models for sportsmen,” Niemeyer said.

 BY ROGER PHILLIPS - rphillips@idahostatesman.com

Copyright: © 2009 Idaho Statesman

 

Good luck if you are one of the lucky ones to get a tag!

Marc Reindell

marc@wildlifecallers.com

 

Steve Craig – Tell us about your best day predator calling

 Steve Craig – The “Mountain Lion King” from Cottonwood Arizona shares a great wildlife calling memory.

Steve Craig is one of the most recognized names in predator calling in North America, and is one of the foremost authorities on calling mountain lions using their own vocalizations. Steve is also an expert in the use of Wildlife Technologies electronic wildlife callers and the library of digitally recorded animal sounds provided by that company. We are very pleased to post Steve Craig’s work on the Wildlife Callers’ Blog.


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This Is Scary, Check It Out

Supreme Court to hear hunting video case

John Van Ness, 

Baltimore Hunting and Fishing Examinar 08/25/2009

 

 On October the sixth the Supreme Court will hear arguments in the United States vs. Stevens case. The outcome of this case has the potential to affect every form of hunting video sold or broadcasted in the United States. Depending on how the court rules, hunting television shows, DVD’s and even personal pictures of hunting trips on the Internet could fall under a federal statute that was intended to prevent the trafficking of media depicting animal cruelty. A portion of the video content in this case involves catch dogs trained to hold a wild boar while hunting. The court will have to decide if this is a form of animal cruelty and if this law is constitutional.  What is disturbing is how the language of the original law could create a precedent that includes hunting as a form of animal cruelty and therefore interstate commerce of media depicting hunting would be illegal. Further than that, the long term implications of a Supreme Court ruling that hunting falls into this category could open a floodgate of state and local lawsuits from animal rights groups attempting to ban hunting.  Though it is far outside the realm of this case and the original law, it is a safe bet that the groups dedicated to ending hunting and all animal use are salivating at the thought of using a Supreme Court ruling to file injunctions against hunting seasons.  (more…)

Idaho Governor Butch Otter Wants a Wolf Tag

Idaho Gov. Butch Otter plans to be one of the hunters bidding for a wolf tag for Idaho’s wolf hunting season set this fall.

The season is limited to 200 wolves, but it’s not stopping the governor who previously endorsed a wolf hunt in 2007 by saying, “I’m prepared to bid for the first ticket to shoot a wolf myself.”

He told reporters on Wednesday, that he will buy a $11.75 tag along with the rest of the state’s wolf hunters.

The state’s wildlife commission limited the number of wolves available to hunt out of fears that the Defenders of Wildlife group would push an injunction to U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy that would stop the wolf hunt altogether.

Wolf numbers exceed 1,000 in Idaho.

“I understand the commission’s conservative and thoughtful action that they took because obviously we want to demonstrate we can manage them,” Otter said. “We also want to find out if we can manage them with our hunter community.”

Governor-Butch-Otter

Source:  Idaho Statesman -