lundi 20 mars 2017

Who else has beaver fever with these temps??

I'm sure most will not have this issue but a newbie might. DNR press release.

If you don't buy a 2016 base license by Feb. 28, you cannot buy a fur harvester license in March or April.

Trapping

Feb. 28, 2017 is the last day to purchase a 2016 base license! A 2016 base license is required to purchase a 2016 fur harvester license.
All those who hunt and trap furbearing animals must have a valid base license and fur harvester license.
If fur takers do not purchase their 2016 base license by Feb. 28, 2017, they cannot purchase a fur harvester license in the months of March or April.
Base and fur harvester licenses can be purchased at license agents, DNR Customer Service Centers, or online at E-License.
2016 fur harvester licenses expire on April 30, 2017.
Learn about other important changes for fur harvesters during the 2016 seasons by visiting mi.gov/trapping or see the 2016 Michigan Hunting and Trapping Digest found online at mi.gov/dnrdigests.

Let's block ads! (Why?)



Who else has beaver fever with these temps??

Switchgrass help

I tend to agree with BigAl06. Normally I would prep for a year for a perennial food plot, but I think frost seeding this year is a good idea.

It is important that the switchgrass seed gets ground contact depending on the thatch that is there now. If the thatch is heavy, perhaps you could run a spike harrow over it after frost seeding.

I think the year jump on doing it is worth the risk. Because it is going to take three years for it to be tall and screen.

I frost seeded into a heavy fall planting of winter wheat about six years ago. And I went like 10 lbs. per acre of seed. That's way too thick for most habitat word, but I wanted a dead zone screen and it turned out great. I killed the winter wheat that was pretty thick in May. I didn't put simizine down the first year and had a ton of foxtail cool season grasses the first year which I mowed high with a flail mower the first season.

Here is a post with pictures of how thick the winter wheat was:

http://ift.tt/2muSIUX

Let's block ads! (Why?)



Switchgrass help

2016 -2017 Huron River report.

I fished it Saturday afternoon. Threw spinners and cranks just to see if anything was moving. Also, check out the Detroit Jig Company. The guy custom ties steelhead jigs. He fishes the Huron a lot so he has a handle on what combinations work there.

Click to expand...

Let's block ads! (Why?)



2016 -2017 Huron River report.

2017 Garden Planning and Report Thread

15" wide spread rule over APR's?

Noted biologist and author says wildlife agencies lose credibility when defending compromises

Read link for survey...

http://ift.tt/2kG5jmo

Some highlights...

APRs [antler point restrictions] are a good example,” said Winand, who attended grad school at West Virginia University with Gary Alt, father of Pennsylvania’s deer management plan.

“Any 2-year-old [buck] will have a 15-inch inside spread. We know that,” he said. “We could save almost 99 percent of the 1½-year-old deer by setting a 15-inch minimum inside spread.

“But Gary was right in promoting the APRs — three or four points on one side — instead, because there was no way he was going to get the 15-inch rule passed.”

Let's block ads! (Why?)



15" wide spread rule over APR's?

How deep into the sand?

IMHO, I would go with 4' total length, at a minimum, and set the foot peg at 18-24" for 2" PVC. Just my 2 cents. Again, I've found the 3/8" rebar helpful for me with all the rocks around, makes it easier to fit in between them and drive it down

Click to expand...

Let's block ads! (Why?)



How deep into the sand?

HSUS Wants to Ban Fishing

Feb 02, 2017 06:43 pm
Are fish cute? You may recall a PETA anti-fishing campaign a few years ago attempting to rebrand fish as “sea kittens.” It was widely mocked. But picking up where PETA failed, expect the Humane Society of the United States to begin campaigning more aggressively against fishing and eating sushi.

The notorious HSUS CEO Wayne Pacelle has acknowledged what PETA saw as the limitation in a campaign against fishing. In an interview, Pacelle agreed that the reason he didn’t campaign against fishing was because they weren’t “furry and cute.”

So HSUS is now adopting an intellectual approach. Over the past several months, Jonathan Balcombe, an HSUS employee, has been laying the groundwork for the idea that fish have personalities. Call it the “Little Nemo” strategy.

Balcombe is formerly with the so-called Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a vegan advocacy group with PETA ties and a checkered past. He was also with the failed Humane Society University (which wasn’t a real university), and is now with HSUS’s Institute for Science and Policy (at least partially a misnomer).

In June, Balcombe published What a Fish Knows, a book arguing that fish have sentience. And quietly, HSUS has begun offering papers on its website from Animal Sentience, which purports to be a scientific journal. On its website, you’ll find articles such as “Cognitive evidence of fish sentience,” “Are Animals Persons?,” and “Fish sentience and the precautionary principle.”

Behind all the academic-speak, let’s be clear what HSUS’s goals are: No more sushi. No more blackened salmon entrees. No more fishing for trout and bass in the local river with your family. “There isn’t any justification for eating a fish instead of chicken,” Balcombe declares.

To get an idea of Balcombe’s comrades-in-arms, we need only look at his Reddit AMA last month. When asked about why groups like HSUS aren’t as aggressive as PETA on fishing, he dodges the question. But he does hat-tip Paul Watson, the head of Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Watson is an international fugitive, and a U.S. federal court has declared Sea Shepherd to be a pirate group. (Watson is also the subject of a hilarious South Park episode, “Whale Whores.”)

Balcombe is so far out of the mainstream that he compares eating meat to racism. From his blog:

The folks next door stopped in the other day to give us a tin of cookies as a Christmas offering. You couldn’t ask for more amicable, helpful neighbors. They also love animals, feeding the deer and squirrels and drawing flocks of wild birds with their ever-filled feeders. As we hugged and shook hands in greeting, we asked what their plans for Xmas were. Barb said they had been invited to a friend’s place where—and at this point she leaned in with a hushed and confiding tone—they would visit the homes of several prominent niggers and burn crosses on their front lawns.

Of course, I made up that last bit. Barb and Paul are not in the least bit racist. What Barb really said was that their friends had invited them over to have roast lamb. For me, that was just as jarring, if less surprising, than if she really had admitted to terrorizing black Americans.

He’s not alone in noxious analogies. HSUS food policy director Matt Prescott created a PETA campaign comparing modern farms to Nazi concentration camps (and he was accused by the Holocaust Museum of being dishonest, to boot).

Back to fishing. HSUS’s strategy is to anthropomorphize fish just as it does with other animals. Is it a harder lift? Sure. People still don’t view fish as particularly cute compared to charismatic megafauna. But make no mistake, HSUS will work to get rid of fishing any way it can.

Read in browser »

Let's block ads! (Why?)



HSUS Wants to Ban Fishing