Hunting Buffalo

Aboriginal hunters were driving buffalo over steep riverbanks in the Hartney, Lauder and Melita areas along the Souris River in Manitoba. But by the 1860s, only scattered individual animals could be found in the Souris River Valley, where once there had been hundreds forming a single herd. The carnage wrought upon the buffalo was not the direct result of aboriginal survival requirements – the buffalo and natives had shared the plains for thousand of years without an appreciable drop in the animal’s population – but the commercial demand for hides and meat converted into pemmican.

For aboriginal hunters, virtually all parts of the animal were useful. Meat was cut from bones using stone or bone knives held in wood or bone handles. Some of the meat was immediately consumed, but most was made into pemmican.

Daniel, a North West Company fur trader who spent five years in the Swan River and Assiniboine River regions of Manitoba in the early 1800s, described the butchering of a buffalo: “The Natives generally cut up the body of an animal into eleven pieces, to prepare it for transportation to their tents, or to our forts. These pieces are the four limbs, the two sides of ribs, the two sinews on each side of the back bone, the brisket, the croup, and the back bone. Besides these, they save and use the tongue, heart, liver, paunch, and some part of the entrails. The head, they carry home, the meat which is on it they eat; and the brains they rub over the skin, in dressing it.”

Using special tools hafted into bone or wood handles, buffalo skins were scrapped free of tissue and fat. If the hide was to be used as a robe, the hair was left intact. Otherwise, the hair was removed and the hide tanned into leather for the making of clothing, footgear, pouches and bags. The “thread” for sewing the latter articles was provided by buffalo sinew, the tough fibrous tendons split into thin strands.

Bison bones were another valuable commodity. Large fragments of limb bones were sharpened and used for cutting and butchering. Other pieces could be fashioned into awls and used to pierce hide when sewing. Barbed tips for fishing spears were made from bone. The outer covering of bison horns became cups and ladles, and hooves were boiled to make glue.

Since they are rich in fatty marrow, the bones were smashed open and the marrow extracted for consumption. Most of the discarded bones were which were boiled with water in pottery, bark or leather cooking vessels. As the fat from the bones rose to the surface of the liquid, it was scooped off into a container. This “bone grease” or “butter” was used to flavour other dishes and with the other fat from reserves from buffalo, became a major component of pemmican.

Today, we may cringe at the thought of consuming such a fat-filled diet, but in the context of the plains, fat was essential for the survival of aboriginal people and early European settlers, explorers and fur traders – lean-meat animals were invariably shunned unless intense hunger led to desperation. When hunting buffalo, aboriginals intentionally targeted the plumpest animals – cows preferred – which in turn, had the most fat content.

Fur trader Alexander Henry wrote in 1808, “Small openings are left (in the buffalo pounds) to admit the dogs to feed upon the carcasses of the bulls, which are generally left as useless.”

The bull’s usefulness resulted from having little of the energy-rich tissue to satiate the craving for fat.

“Despite their smaller size,” according to Jack Brink, cows have a greater absolute weight of fat than makes do, for most of the year. This is a characteristic of females in many species (again including our own); reproduction requires greater fat reserves for energy, and since the females have to carry and nurse the young, they are genetically disposed to have greater fat reserves..Aboriginal bison hunters learned this lesson thousands of years ago.

Brink related the story of American artist George Catlin, who singled out and shot the biggest bull only to suffer ridicule and laughter from the rest of his party “for having aimed at an old bull, whose flesh was unsuitable for food.”

The only time of the year Metis and natives intentionally hunted bulls was in the spring and early summer when they were generally fatter than cows coming off stingy winter grazing.

 

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Hunting Title Holders

Jimmy Hunter, Reno, Nevada, (Junior) 197 out of 200; Grace Bachhuber, Mayville, Wisconsin, (Women) 194 out of 200; Paul Smith, Lakewood, Colorado, (Pro) 198 out of 200; Art Holm, Minneapolis, Minnesota (Introductory Veterans) 98 out of 100.

All-American Johnny Sternberger of Trotwood, Ohio, won his first major GAH victory when he shattered 200 straight, then 125 straight, to take the Introductory Crown in a shoot-off with six others. Pete Souba of Minneapolis, Minnesota, placed second; Dan Olrich won third place and the AA Class trophy.

Other winners were: Mrs. Van Marker, Versailles, Ohio, (Women) 192 out of 200; Joe Hancock, Wichita, Kansas, (Junior) 198 out of 200; Jimmy Columbo, Omaha, Nebraska, (Sub-Junior) 195 out of 200. Winner of Veterans race for 70 year-olds and better was Adolph Nelson, the 73 year-old Detroit, Michigan, marathon artist who has shot more registered targets than any man dead or living. Nelson, who has fired at more than a quarter of a million 16-yard registered clays, shot 99 out of 100 to win.

More winners: Bard and Eulalie Higgins, Duluth, Minnesota, (Husband and Wife) 387 out of 400; Mrs. Van Marker, (Women’s Vets) 99 out of 100; Bard and Jimmy Higgins, (Parent and Son) 398 out of 100. The famous brother duo, the Berlet Boys from Wapakoneta, Ohio, again triumphed in the Brother and Brother race when they shot 396 out of 400. When we asked Dave if the heavy rain bothered his shooting, he said, “We’re just a couple of farmers. We don’t know enough to come in out of the rain.”

Then big Dan Orlich, the former Green Bay Packers football star, banged out 100 straight to take the Champion of Champions race for the third straight time. But Olrich had to beat state champion Sonnie Rich of Greenville, Mississippi, and Don Mackerman of Newton, Iowa, in a three-way shoot-off. Jimmy Hunter won the Junior Champ of Champs contest with 99 out of 100, and Punkin Flock of Miami, Florida, headed the Women’s field when she registered 198 out of 200.

C.E. Barnhart, who had a big week at the Grand, taking two of the three major shotgun titles, won the coveted Class AA championship when he broke 200 straight in the main event and 175 without a miss in the shoot-off to beat two Iowans, Don Mackerman of Newton (second) and Bob Martin of Cedar Rapids. Ken Kleckner of Riverdale, Illinois, won Class A with 200 straight. Seventeen-year-old Dick Polcyn of Rusell, Kansas, took B Class with 198 out of 200. The C Class winner was Dale Mount of Columbus, Ohio, who shot 197 out o 200. Ed Platske of Milwaukee grabbed D Class when he scored 195 out of 200. Sonnie Rich was the victor in the Zone Champ of Champs competition with 99 out of 100, and Freddy Missildine, the famed skeet shooter from Sea Island, Georgia, was the winner of the Professional event when he broke 200 straight, then beat Tom Frye in the shoot-off. Young Tommy Dunn of Joliet, Illinois, broke 199 of 200 to pace the Illinois team, which captured the Five-Man-State-Team race with 987 out of 1000. Other members were Gary Stafford, Harry Skalsky, Gus Wesley and Forrest Woods. Larry Gravestock, the 25-year-old Amarillo, Texas, sporting goods dealer, became the second amateur to break 100 straight doubles at the Grand American. Larry won the Special race with this score. Merle Kemmerly, the Bossier City, Louisiana, night club owner, broke 100 three years ago.

Seventeen year-old Jimmy De Filippi of Oglesby, Illinois, a member of my 1963 Sports Afield All-America Junior Trap Team, caused somewhat of a furor when he shattered 99 out of 100 to win the world Doubles championship. Dick Baldwin, Danbury, Connecticut, took the Professional championship when he fired 98 out of 100; and Judith Allison of Elgin, Illinois, was the top gun in the women’s event with 88 out of 100. Wayne Rowland, a fine shot from Garden City, Kansas, winner of the Kansas State Championship, was victorious in the Vandalia Open Handicap when he scored 99 out of 100 from 23 yards. Bob Diefenderfer, 36, of Reading, Pennsylvania, climaxed a great session of shooting when he won the important High-Over-All championship. The hard-shooting Keystone gunner broke 971 out of 1000. Other HOA winners were: Sheila Egan of Mount Vernon, New York, (Women) 935 out of 1000; Jimmy De Filippi, 968 out of 1000; Fred Missildine, (Pro) 953 out of 1000. Lt. Col. Hank Copsey, Colorado Springs, Colorado, headed the All-Around field when he finished with 391 out of 400. Others: Wanna Elliott, Columbus, Ohio, (Women) 371 out of 400; Kent Stauffer (Junior) 380 out of 400; Don Flewelling, (Pro) 385 out of 400.

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Coastal British Columbia

Our wandering camping minstrel begins his most recent adventure in the littoral rain forests of British Columbia and fulfills a lifetime dream.

Day before yesterday, I received an unusually nice, eight-page letter from a reader and fellow sportsman – a doctor who has kindly followed most of my hunting tales. In it he asked, “John, how in the world do you get the ideas for these trips, and how do you locate and decide on different areas?” There is no set rule that I follow, but just for once you might possible be interested in how this particular assignment was conceived and executed. It has roots reaching nearly 40 years into the past, and it was recently brought to fulfillment by the understanding and generosity of my boss, Ted Kesting, the Editor of Sports Afield. This was a span of many years, even decades, with my late Dad.

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Our Hunt in Montana

He explained that he had decided our hunt should be held near Lima, Montana, because his biologist friend had told him that was the place. We made a date for the trip. Then I dropped the phone and looked for Lima on the map.

Lima turned out to be a small dot ‘way over in the southwestern part of the state, practically under the Continental Divide that separates Montana from Idaho. It’s a little railroad town on U.S. 91.

While waiting for Gene’s hunting date, I made the long shot for my trophy on Bangtail Ridge near Clyde Park. For a couple of days I shadowed a  good one that hung out in a brushy canyon on Brackett Creek, not far from Bangtail. I got two glimpses of him, once as he stopped on a distant ridge to look me over and once when he crawled past in heavy brush. Don’t let them tell you that mulies never sneak. This one did.

Jack Ward of Livingston finally got him. I told Jack where to take up a stand while I shook down the little canyon; and on the way to his post Jack jumped the buck, which evidently had anticipated our move and was moving out ahead of schedule. Jack’s .270 stopped him on a dead run as he topped a knob; and when Jack called me  on a little walkie-talkie to report, I loudly attributed his success to luck. Jack said it was scientific marksmanship, and in his case I suspect he’s right.

The deer weighed better than 200 pounds dressed, although the rack wasn’t remarkable. By that time I figured Gene Decker really had the dope on the rut. The following Friday night I steered cautiously over icy streets to his Bozeman home, fearing weather might prevent our 250-mile trip to Lima.

Gene was in fine fettle. “Don’t worry about a thing,” he beamed. “I have weather reports for every inch of the way. We’ll run out of ice ten miles out of Bozeman; and if you follow my directions, it’ll be dry roads nearly all of the way to Lima.”

He was right in every detail. We were in Lima by bedtime, even though we stopped frequently for Gene to make contact with various authorities of his acquaintance. He stopped once and got some maps.  “With this thorough preparation, getting my buck is merely a formality,” he said.

At Lima we stayed at a railroad hotel and had ham and eggs in a local lunchroom at six the next morning. The temperature got down near zero during the night. Gene got out his maps and started giving me directions. We turned off the highway at Dell, and from there on the landmarks included such spots as Tonsillitis Gulch, Caboose Canyon and Muddy Hole Basin. We headed for Grassy Top Mountain, and from the map which he occasionally allowed me to glance at, I figured we were going to hunt in the Tendoy Range, within about eight miles of the Idaho border.

Unfortunately I had gotten my radar turned around during the night, and north is still south when I approach Lima. I bogged down in the snow when I drove up a draw with a little patch of pines at the upper end. Gene said we’d better put on chains, but I didn’t pay much attention because I was watching 20 or so mule deer trotting out of the pines. Finally I came back to earth, realized I was stuck and got out the chains.

“Forget that bunch,” Gene said briskly. “Nothing but junk antlers.”

“We saw a lot of bucks that day. Some of the bigger ones had harems of a dozen or so does. The country is made up of steep, sagebrush-covered ridges with patches of timber in the canyons. There were several inches of snow.

We’d near the top a ridge and get out to walk the last few yards. If there was some good hunting country visible, we’d walk it out. Generally we’d see deer somewhere on distant slopes or popping up in the sage near at hand.

With me nervously urging him to “look again” at all the big ones, Gene rejected most of the bucks with a single glance. Some he commented on. “Wow!” he’d say. “Look at the prongs on that one.

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Hunting Trips – Events Common Mishaps and Mistakes

As you read this you are probably about ready to go hunting , are thinking of hunting or planning a hunting trip or trips.    This may be your year to make the trek to our” neighbors to the North” and even to the wilds of Lake Manitoba and the interlake Lake Manitoba Narrows regions.

This may well be the year of your dreams that everything goes according to your plans and your script, or it may be a year of hunting and hunting trip no shows and disasters with poor hunting results at the end of the day or end of the trip.

To avoid this hideous trap of bad events here are some of the more common mishaps to watch out for :

1) You pull the trigger and instead of a “bang” sound you hear think.  Most likely you either have a dud primer or the primer is good but your firing pin as not struck it hard enough to set it off.

-  count to ten slowly.  You may have a hangfire , and if the round goes off with the bolt open ,deer hungting or duck hunting will be the furthest thing from your mind.  Eject the cartridge, rack in a new one, and pull the trigger again.  There is no use resnapping on the dud, because if the fault is with the primer, it very unlikely at all that a second firing of the firing pin , will set it off.

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Moose Hunt

My long time hunting buddies and I decided this would be the year we opted for a fly-in moose hunt in the far north of Western Ontario.

A long 17 hour drive from Sudbury area followed by a 45 minute flight with pilot Don Elliot of Mattice Outfitters. This family operation of over 25 years hosted us for a self guided moose hunt on the Okogi Reservoir.

Outstanding accommodations and 14 foot Lund boats with quiet 4 stroke 15 hp Yamaha motors made our ten day hunt a once in lifetime trip.

Greg our master chef prepared meals every night that left us stuffed. Wacky-Pat ensured the main cottage was well heated for those cold nights. Big-O scoped the shorelines for possible moose signs. Timmy kept us entertained with a nightly chorus of campfire dinner music.

The Ogoki is a long lake with bays and inlets so inviting to moose. Tamarack and Black Spruce crowd the shore line in most places. Using quality binoculars while skirting shorelines was one of our most productive methods for locating moose.

Weather changed about every half hour so we had to be prepared for dead calm to white caps on the lake. Scouting the numerous bays indeed paid off in the end.

ogoki bull 2008 Moose Hunt

Our island host Austin ( Don’s son) showed us how just versitile a LUND boat could be.

He helped us load my almost 1000 pound bull into 14 -foot Lund and transported it back to the island dock (12 kilometers away) to gut and quarter it there.

I never thought it would even fit inside the Lund never mind float!

Two days earlier Poco had shot a hefty cow. We gut and quartered it and then  loaded up into the  14 foot Lund with no problems.

Big kudos to those reliable Lund boats and Austin for all his help.

To book a great moose or awesome fishing trip on the OGOKI contact Yolanda at 1-800-411-0334 or online at www.walleye.ca

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Chain Saws for the Outdoorsmen

October 5th, 2008 by admin

Next in line came the first as a commercial heavy duty piece of equipment for commercial loggers and later high quality lighweigth  gasoline powered chain saws which could be packed away by outsdoormen.

The first of these chain saws may of been fine for professionals in the lumber and woodcutting trades but were more than a bit too much for the amateur to handle , so says Manitoba outfitter Jadran Transcona.  Even for the odd casual woodcutting these devices were to unwieldy if not downright dangerous to have down at the lake cottage or camp or for occasional outdoorsmen and hunters out on a hunting or fishing vacation at their favorite lodge.

While many serious campers bought and used these , they were not the handiest items to include in general hunting , fishing or camping gear packing.  This the manufacturers recognized this need in the hunting and fishing outdoors market for such a product.




 Moose Hunt

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October 2nd, 2008 by admin


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Still Hunting – the Art

Still hunting also means  knowing when to stop and when to move , sensing when to call and when to listen.  It means learning how to read all manner of sign, how to react to changing weather  and how to adapt to varying habitat.  It involves all the hunting skills and spiritual relationship with the wild world.   Most importantly  still hunting is a total experience , an art worth taking and taking time to develop.

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Silent – A Still Hunter Reveals his Secrets

Still – hunting , the art of silent stalking, is an old an art as the relationship between hunter and whitetail deer , even as far back as the woolly mammoth .    In this case its all about stalking that elusive white tail deer.  And even though it continues to be both effective and productive, still hunting’s prevalence seems to be declining over the years. the victim of hunter’s busy lives , too little time to spend in the field as well the preponderance of high tech gadgetry.

Hunter and deer, however are still as well matched as they were millennium ago.  The whitetail has developed finely tuned survival skills , adapting almost anywhere that man lives in North America.  More whitetail deer are on the continent today than at any time in history -recent or not, even though more humans are hunting than ever before attesting to the deer’s highly developed abilities to survive.

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