Last week, I told you about my recent pheasant-hunting experience. Since then, we've been out a couple more times. My shooting hasn't gotten much better, but what I have learned and the changes I've seen are amazing.
When I was growing up, my dad tilled the fields and pastured 40 or so head of cattle on the hillside below the woods. Other than a couple groves of mature maples and an occasionally lonely elm, there wasn't another tree across the side hill.
Well, things sure have changed.
The majority of the grazing land has grown up over the years, completely overtaken by scrub pines. It's the way things happen. Now scattered among those pines, hard wood trees are taking hold. A new forest is generating itself. By the time my grandkids are my age, many of the overcrowded pines will have died off, and the land will be dominated by maples, oaks and cherry.
As we have followed the well-trained Labs through this tangle of pines, blackberry briars and other assorted undergrowth in search of pheasants, I've noticed another dramatic change. The hill has definitely gotten steeper. I know we haven't had that much rain and erosion with the hurricanes and stuff, but there's certainly a noticeable difference.
My dad climbed that hill almost every day of his life. In his later years, I remember him saying the same thing. "That darn hill just keeps getting steeper." Now I know what he means.
Other major changes have become obvious, too.
With the growth of new trees and the transformation from pasture to forest, the patterns of the wildlife have changed as well. There's a gully going up from the swamp to the next level that always has been a major travel route for deer. Sure they still use that area, but not like they used to. While hunting those colorful, ring-necked birds, I discovered that their main, muddied trails are now 40 or 50 yards away, running diagonally up the hillside in the thicker pine cover.
Hunting these newly released birds has opened my eyes. It's not just that little gully; the entire mountain has changed over the years. I once thought I knew exactly where deer would be when deer season started, but I failed to change with the habitat.
I also found more buck rubs on trees than I've seen in many years. I guess I've just been in the wrong spots. It's true what they say: Location is everything. Certainly all that buck sign on those saplings was made by more than I saw while hunting last fall.
This might be a good lesson for all of us. After deer season is over and the woods return to normal, we should do some serious scouting for next year. With a little snow on the ground, we can follow tracks and see how the deer's normal patterns have changed from one year to the next. Sure there always will be those special places where deer will hang out or travel to, but the forests and habitat are constantly changing. To be successful hunters, we have to change as well.
During these recent bird hunts, I've already picked out a couple of new spots to hang my tree stands next year. Maybe some of you will want to do the same thing. There's no deep snow to stop you. Go for a hike and see what you learn. It sure opened my eyes.
Rick Brockway writes a weekly outdoors column for The Daily Star. Email him at robrockway@hotmail.com.
Local Sports
Things change all the time, so start scouting for the next deer season now
- Local Sports
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Yellowjackets to open football season at Sidney
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL ... Oneonta High's attempt to extend its football winning streak into the 2012 season will begin on the road. The Class B Yellowjackets will open the 2012 season at Class C Sidney, according to a schedule athletic directors received Tuesday morning from Section Four Football Coordinator David Garbarino. Although specific game times and dates have not been announced, Week One runs Aug. 31-Sept. 1.
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Warriors start strong en route to Class C win
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL ROUNDUP ... Ninth-seeded Sidney bunched 11 runs into the first three innings and earned a sectional victory at Tioga for the second time in three years with a 14-5 Section Four Class C first-round baseball victory Tuesday.
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O-State track sending 5 to nationals
COLLEGE ROUNDUP ... Junior sprinter Sean Bernstein will be the busiest among the five athletes Oneonta State will send to the three-day NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships that begin Thursday at Clarement-Mudd-Scripps in California.
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Section Four Tournaments
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Area Sports Briefs
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Today's Datebook
- Tuesday, May 22, 2012
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Bloop single lifts Schenevus to T-V title
HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL ... TRI-VALLEY LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP ... ONEONTA _ Jessica Kruh's winning hit for Schenevus seemed appropriate given the weather for the Tri-Valley League softball final Monday. With rain coming down intermittently in drips and drabs, the Dragons senior dropped a blooper into shallow left-center to score Taylor Spranger and lead Schenevus to its fifth straight T-V title with an 11-10 win over Franklin at Oneonta State.
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B-G/A freshman sets 2 school records
HIGH SCHOOL TRACK ... Bainbridge-Guilford/Afton freshman Julia Knapp set a pair of school records as Section Four opened its track class meets Monday with the boys and girls steeplechase and pentathlon at Binghamton Alumni Stadium. Knapp, the reigning Daily Star Female Athlete of the Year, finished with 2,657 points in the pentathlon, breaking the school record of 2,455 she set last Monday in the Midstate Athletic Conference Championships. During the competition, Knapp also broke the school record in the 100-meter hurdles, crossing in 16.09 seconds.
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Afton's Winans helps Coastal Carolina to NCAA tourney
ON CAMPUS ... Afton graduate Jessie Winans scored the winning run in Coastal Carolina's 2-1 NCAA Division I Athens Regional softball game Saturday at Georgia.
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Hartwick picks Suderley, Ha as top athletes
HARWICK COLLEGE AWARDS ... Hartwick College selected sophomore men's basketball forward Jared Suderley and senior swimmer Stephanie Ha as its athletes of the year during the Hawks' Student-Athlete Awards Ceremony last Wednesday at Lambros Arena.
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Section Four Tournaments
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MAC Scholar-Athletes: Spring 2012
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Local Cycling
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Local Golf: Platt Memorial
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Local Auto Racing
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Today's Datebook
- Monday, May 21, 2012
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Yellowjackets make it two straight STAC titles
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL ... SOUTHERN TIER ATHLETIC CONFERENCE FINAL ... The Yellowjackets became the first OHS squad in any sport to win back-to-back Southern Tier Athletic Conference titles Saturday, winning consecutive games at NYSEG Stadium against Horseheads and Johnson City. Against the former, senior left-hander Mike Calkins threw his first varsity no-hitter, striking out 17 and walking one as OHS beat the Blue Raiders, 3-1, in eight innings. In the latter, senior Ben Moxley scattered six hits and six Yellowjackets batters had RBI singles in a six-run fourth inning that carried OHS to a 10-2 win over the Wildcats.
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OHS softball falls, 3-0, to Windsor in tiebreaker
HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL ... SOUTHERN TIER ATHLETIC CONFERENCE EAST DIVISION TIEBREAKER ... WINDSOR _ It's not often teams score three times without a hit. Rarer still is when a game turns on a foul ball. Both happened in the fourth inning of Saturday's Southern Tier Athletic Conference East Division softball tiebreaker. Windsor turned two walks, a hit batsman, an error and a bunt into three fourth-inning runs that carried the Black Knights to a 3-0 victory over Oneonta High.
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Daily Star sports section was a totally different story in the 1970s
COLUMN BY DEAN RUSSIN ... The more things change ... Well, sometimes things just change. Case in point, today's sports front. It's slightly different than what you're used to seeing on a daily basis, but it's completely different than what you used to see 40 years ago. Had there been a May 21 edition of The Daily Star in 1972, it would have been odd to say the least. That date fell on a Sunday, and The Daily Star doesn't have a Sunday edition.
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Kelby still perfect this tennis season
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Yellowjackets to open football season at Sidney

