Saturday, August 18, 2007

Transition season


We had our first little touch of fall this weekend. Cool weather, rain, and the temp in Grand Marais, MN hit 32F last night. My own personal touch of fall was a trip to Bwana Archery to check out a new hunting bow. Bow deer season in Wisconsin begins on Saturday, September 15th this year. The freezer is almost bare with a disturbing lack of venison sausage, bologna, breakfast links, steaks, chops, and roasts. Don't worry fellow paddlers, there is likely enough left for a couple more kayak trips so we should be good. When properly cared for, there is no meat more tasty or healthy than venison. No growth hormones, antibiotics, very low fat, and an excellent flavor make it a carnivores dream. And believe me, in Wisconsin we need to cull a few thousand; the overpopulation problem is severe. The CWD outbreak in the south of the state a few years back, thousands of car-deer collisions, plant species being eradicated, and the crowding out of other species make deer hunting almost your civic duty. I reported a moose sighting near our camp to the local DNR wildlife biologist. He said he had sporadic sightings but in order for moose to thrive in the area the deer population needed to be 1-2 per square mile. Right now they are at 6-10 per square mile. Another friend who is a biology professor at Northland College in Ashland, WI said that Canadian Yew and even cedar are becoming rare because the deer eat the young trees like candy.

Our deer camp is two miles from the south shore of Lake Superior as the crow flies. This enables me to multi task in the fall. I spend a couple hours in the bow stand at dawn and dusk and the middle of the day is spent somewhere between the Brule River and the Meyers Beach sea caves in my boat. On a memorable bow deer opener 4 years ago, I sat in my stand in the morning and saw 8 deer, flushed 5 grouse (never even got a shot off) and then headed for the Brule to troll in the kayak. In about 3 hours I caught walleye, a couple coho, and a nice Lake Trout. It doesn't get much better than that in the fall northwoods.

3 comments:

Lord Hayden said...

Went sea (well, estuary) kayaking at Elkhorn Slough today, in Moss Landing, CA.

Pellicans, sea otters, sea lions, and harbor seals o' plenty. Had a good fight against the tide and afternoon winds coming back out. Damn ocean access means I need a whole new set of toys.

Kristen said...

Hear, hear, on the venison, Olson. And cooked as though it's still walking across your plate. My sister in NZ has a deer farm. Stunning animals. 2.5m fences ;)

DaveO said...

Medium rare is almost too done in my book. Grilled with applewood...I'm drooling just thinking about it.

My Lord, you need a sit on top for fishing (And a good wetsuit and tide chart). Good luck Friday on the Thunderjet race. I understand you'll be in Madtown for the festivities. Ian will be there also.