Thursday, September 11, 2014

Natures Bounty

The 2014 summer season draws to an end here in far Northern Maine. But with the end of summer begins the best season, Fall/Hunting season. With many varieties of fruit bearing trees becoming ripe, the animals will begin to feed on them storing fat reserves for the upcoming winter months. Berry season this year was one of the best I have seen in years in the County. Many of the berries becoming ripe a couple weeks "early".

High bush cranberry
The food plots are doing well. The moose have started feeding on the cabbage and brassica leaves and will pick up with intensity as the colder nights approach. The deer have found our corn stalks and are lightly feeding on the small tender ears of corn. As we receive more freezing temps in mid to late November the winter bulbs will be pawed up and fed on for that little extra fat reserve for the harsh winter ahead. 
"Nova-Joe" corn




Winter bulb mix
The clover fields are doing very well. With lots of lime being applied throughout the growing season it should be "sweet" for the deer. We also like to plant Dixie Crimson clover in our plots. It has to be replanted each season because of the severity of our winter. The Dixie crimson clover has a very sweet fragrance when being mowed and is a great attractant for the whitetail deer in our area. The soybean plants also grew very well this year. But I have yet to see any soybeans on the plants. The soybean plants were browsed upon throughout the summer growing season by many a deer getting the "taste" for soybeans. We find here in Northern Maine that it most often takes a season or two for the deer to realize that some of the plants in the food plots are "food". Most of what we plant is not natural to them as a food source. We most likely are the only food plots in the area that these deer will ever see.
Dixie Crimson clover

soybeans


Monday, September 1, 2014

2014 Bear Season

   The 2014 bear season started on August 25 and runs about 4 weeks. The bear were very active at most of our sites throughout the baiting month. With many trail camera pictures coming in each time we would bait, expectations for the upcoming season were high. Each bait site had multiple bears hitting at different times of the daylight hours. The pictures ranged from early morning hours to the late evening minutes just before legal time ended.
   Congratulations to Tom from Virginia on tagging out on his first night on stand with a beautiful 280 lb bear. Although he put his time in last year (2013) and never shot a bear. Just goes to show that time on the stand is about the only thing that puts the odds in the hunters favor. But bears will be bears. Our second hunter here, also from Virginia, only got to see an outline of a bear in the late evening hours, although it was still "legal" time, we thank him for making a great decision and not taking a less than perfect shot. Tracking a wounded bear at night is not fun or recommended.









Congratulations Tom




130 lbs