American and French Brittanys as companion gun dogs. Hunting, training, trialing and more.
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Posts from — August 2008

Montana 2008 upland report on sharpies and huns

If you follow my message board perhaps you have read my posts regarding bird numbers this year.  If not, here it is:  below average, excluding pheasant numbers in some areas of Montana.

I don’t know why this has occurred with a rainy spring.  Everyone says how terrific the spring was and how everything is green and there is grass etc. 

From what I can gather, the unrealized predictions are multi-factorial.  Here’s why:  Number 1, statewide approval for emergency grazing of CRP lands due to winter drought.  Number 2, ill timed rains combined with cold spring/early summer weather resulting in high chick mortality.  Number 3, Montana F&W means of estimation for public release (more later in this writing).

Anyone who hunted here in Montana last year will tell you we had a banner year for sharpies with average hun numbers (above average is some areas!).  There were no doubt sufficient adult bird numbers headed into the spring nesting season.  It was nothing for me to flush HUNDREDS of sharpies in just one day last year!  It was awesome.  Big broods of sharpie chicks were seen literally running up and down the roads.

What I am discovering is that Montana is no different than Texas and Oklahoma.  You can’t “save up” your birds by not hunting them.  Mother nature will have her impact on bird numbers each year based on some simple factors: rain, temps, severe weather, farm/ranching practices, predators, etc.

It seems that this year we were dealt a double edged sword.  While the late spring rains were welcome, the cold temps didn’t do well with the chicks.  I think the cold June temps played the most significant role in reduced numbers.

I believe that pheasant numbers may be up.  Not around here but in many areas of the state.  Sharpies, a very durable bird of many thousands of years do and will rebound from tough years.  I’m not worried about that.  Huns, non-native to our country seem to live vicariously through the most subtle whims of mother nature here in Montana.  I would guess that one year in five is good for huns in my part of Montana (region 7).

It seems that the biologists in Montana base there upland bird predictions on spring bird counts prior to actual chick production.  This information is disseminated through the media and soon becomes ’presumed fact’ by the unknowing hunter.  Because Montana has a large scale ‘big game’ program, the biologists must turn their time and efforts to big game for a good part of the year.  It can be said that sharpies take a back seat to big game and pheasant, whether it is true or not, I don’t know.

I am hearing reports of folks calling biologists working for Montana F&W at various offices scattered all across Montana and all having their own opinions with no apparent widespread communication among each other.  It seems that once the pre-nesting prediction is made, that’s it.  Period.  On to big game.

One office told a client of mine “Didn’t you read the prediction on our website” to which he replied “Yes I did but a person that is there right now running dogs is not finding the predictions” (paraphrasing).  That statement made the  person rethink their reply and state that the bird numbers actually seen afield are down despite predictions.

Predictions are just that, predicitons.  No one should base their hunting trip simply on predictions.  It is always helpful to know someone in the area and hear what they have to say.  As I was once told in the Navy, its where the ship meets the water or where the rubber meets the road is where things are really happening.

So, no matter whether it is Montana or Texas, it is always helpful to know folks that are actually there and reporting from the trenches.

I really like the Texas Okalahoma approach to a late summer roadside survey.  It has always been accurate and is a great way to further define early predictions. 

I’m having a blast up here in Montana no matter the bird numbers and I do hope you feel the same way when you are in the field.  It’s not about the kill, it’s the comraderie and great dog work afield.  Of course a fine Brittany is an awesome fireside companion!

I suppose my message to sum it all up is for you to do your homework carefully.  This means do more than read a magazine or a web site.  With the high cost of fuel nowadays, it would be a shame to spend a lot of money only to arrive and find out predictions were wrong.

Happy hunting this season and give your bird dog a treat for me!

Dave

August 28, 2008   3 Comments

Off to Montana, 2008

With just a few minutes to relax in the a.c., I thought I’d bring things up to date.

I have been quite busy for the last couple of months getting dogs trained and getting my ‘nused’ trailer ready for my annual Montana training trip.

I found a gooseneck trailer for a really good price on craigslist a couple months back and have since been busy getting it ship shape for the long trip.  No trailer is ever ready I suppose as I am always trying to find a better way to do things.

This year, I have decided that the dogs will travel with airconditioning as opposed to previous years in which my trailer had large exhaust fans that keep the air flowing over all the dogs.  It worked fine but the dogs were still warm.

For a fair amount of money I found a nice new RV airconditioner and heater combo.  With the help (ok, I helped) of my friend Pete, we got it installed.  Since the goosneck already had a standard RV sized air vent in it, it was not too bad as the A.C. fits right into the same size hole.

Pete also installed (I’m a good helper!) new lights for the trailer so that with the flip of a switch, the entire area around the trailer is lit up.  That should prove to be terrific for those days when I arrive back to the rig with tired horses, tired dogs at the same time it is getting dark!

So the a.c. is set-up, the generator is working and it does a nice job!  I have a wireless thermometer I bought from Wally-World and have tested it out too.  For 17 dollars, it tells the time with alarm clock, monitors inside temperature at the base unit plus remote temperature.  This thing even has temperature alarms to let me know when it is getting too warm or too cold for the dogs back in the living quarters of the gooseneck as I travel.

The other day I had my a.c. running via my generator and within a reasonable amount of time, my carrier rv ac unit dropped the temp from 100 degrees to a cold 66 degrees.  

As I travel to Montana this August, the dogs are assured to have comfortable accomodations in the living quarters of the gooseneck.  But you never know when things can go wrong so as a back-up, I installed pop-up vents on the top and side of the quarters plus I have an inverter to operate high velocity fans which run off the goosneck battery.

My wife Debbie, whose father is a retired professional cabinet maker, made me a nice set of steps for getting up into the sleeping quarters.  It looks professional and store bought.  She also painted the inside ceiling of the quarters…her suggestion.  The living quarters came insulated but the paneling was dated and a bit dirty so Debbie made all the cuts on the new paneling / trim and I installed it.  Looks pretty good.

I decided to go with airline approved plastic dog crates for kennels at the urging of my good friends Jim and Mary Crawford.  They have a very nice custom trailer for their horses and dogs but use plastic dog crates in a special built rack.  Mary says it makes for easy clean up rather than installing permanent kennels which can be difficult to clean.  I agree.  I’d much rather pull out the plastic dog crate and hose it down OUTSIDE the trailer than try to clean up a stinkin’ mess INSIDE the trailer!

‘Nuff ramblin’ for now.  I better get back at it! 

Take care and give your dog a treat for me.

Dave

 

August 14, 2008   1 Comment