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Showing posts with label Hunting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hunting. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 9, 2022

2022-23 California Wingshooter's Calendar

Thumbnail of 2022-23 California Wingshooter's Calendar

I am obsessed with wingshooting, but as organized as I am, I have a hard time remembering all the season dates and limits for all the birds in California. So I designed this visual calendar that puts literally 25+ pages of California regulations for upland and waterfowl shotgun seasons into a single, easy-to-read poster. I threw in rabbits and squirrels too, because why not?

If you or someone you know is a wingshooter in California, check it out - you can buy a copy for $5. It's a PDF that you can store on a mobile device so you can find answers in the field, even without cell signal - just zoom to see the details you need. Or, you can print it as a 16x20 poster.

The poster features:
  • Shotgun seasons listed both as dates and bars along a timeline to easily determine what's legal on any given day (waterfowl seasons use color blind-friendly colors)
  • Youth and veteran waterfowl hunt dates and eligibility requirements, and youth spring turkey hunt dates
  • Daily, possession and season limits (including exceptions)
  • Legal shooting hours (there are four sets!)
  • License/validation requirements
  • End-of-daylight-saving-time reminder
  • Full- and new moon phases
  • Purchase includes license for the buyer to download PDF to three devices, and to print one poster for the buyer's home and another for their club, if applicable (Fedex/Kinko's can print at poster size).
  • Purchase securely, then download PDF immediately from the website, or later from an email that will be sent to you.
    

 © Holly A. Heyser 2022

Sunday, February 20, 2022

A new joint venture: To The Bone

It's been almost 10 years since I ended my old blog, NorCal Cazadora. While I have found many other venues for my writing since then, none have been the right place for a lot of the most serious stuff on my mind - the big questions about how and why we interact with nature as hunters.

Blogs as they were back then have either disappeared or morphed into straight-up websites. Facebook has become the place where discussions happen, but woe unto you if you write a blog-length Facebook post. Instagram is a place for pretty pictures, not intellectual discovery.

Then came Substack. Like traditional blogs, Substack is a platform for meaningful writing, but its delivery system is a built-in newsletter (not search engines), and its revenue model is subscriptions (not advertising or sponsorships). This, it turns out, is exactly what Hank and I had been looking for. Hank, too, used to enjoy putting thought-provoking posts on his blog Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, but that site is now more focused on the how-to of putting wild food on your table.

So, I'm excited to announce we have started a joint Substack newsletter called To The Bone. Click on over to check it out - there is a smattering of free posts to sample, and you can be a paid or unpaid subscriber. Subscriptions cost $5 a month or $50 a year.
 
Why should you have to pay for anything when I used to write at no cost to you on NorCal Cazadora? Two reasons: No ads is the obvious one. But the important one is that our writing requires experience, thought and time, all of which have value.

It's been so gratifying getting back to the writing I love. There is much to explore. I hope you'll join us on the journey.


© Holly A. Heyser 2022

Thursday, April 15, 2021

Video: What Shotguns and Shoes Have in Common - Fit Matters

I was super excited to be invited by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to do a presentation for its R3 Harvest Huddle Hour series about choosing a shotgun that's right for you.

It was, of course, inspired by my long struggle dealing with cross-dominance and a stupid-long neck - both of which taught me the importance of good fit, and inspired me to become adept at adjusting shotgun fit.

That knowledge has come in handy in my volunteer work with scores of new hunters, including lots of women (among whom cross-dominance is common).

The presentation covers:
  • What type of shotgun to buy
  • Understanding gun fit
  • Buying a shotgun
  • Safety considerations
  • Ways to practice with your new gun
Enjoy!


© Holly A. Heyser 2021

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Video: Dove hunting for beginners

One of my greatest passions is helping new hunters. Usually I do it at in-person events or on my own YouTube channel, but then Covid happened, and then the world Zoomed.

Here's a recent webinar I did for beginning hunters about how to hunt doves in California.


© Holly A. Heyser 2020

Sunday, February 10, 2019

Videos: How to pluck a duck, how to recycle duck-plucking wax

I've got two new videos in my series about processing ducks: how to pluck a duck cleanly (no-wax method), and how to recycle duck plucking wax. Why would you have duck plucking wax to recycle? Well, you can see why in another (much older) video about waxing ducks. Why would you want to wax a duck? Because it does a really good job of getting rid of down.

But for those who don't want to deal with the time and mess of wax, the method in the first video comes awfully close.



© Holly A. Heyser 2019

Thursday, March 1, 2018

New cookbook: Pheasant, Quail, Cottontail

Our fourth cookbook, Pheasant, Quail, Cottontail, is now available! You can order signed copies on Hank's website here, and unsigned copies on Amazon here.


© Holly A. Heyser 2018

Friday, September 30, 2016

Video: CWA-BOW Women's Pheasant Hunt Weekend

California Waterfowl's Women's Pheasant Hunt Weekend is very dear to me: Before I started working for CWA, I was volunteering for CWA, and this was my favorite event.

Located at Birds Landing between the San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento, the event gives women the chance to get licensed, learn to shoot and try hunting for just $250. Because gear is provided, this basically means if they decide they hate hunting, they're out just two days and $250 because they didn't have to invest in a gun or hunting gear.

Of course, that's superfluous because the women always want to keep hunting. Check out the video from this year's event and you'll see why. And if you'd like to learn more about CWA's women's events, click here.



© Holly A. Heyser 2016

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Video: Argentina dove hunting time-lapse

Virtually every wingshooter has heard of the mythic dove hunting down in Argentina: wave after never-ending wave of doves. Like every hunter, I've had high expectations dashed, so I've always wondered if it could really be that good down there.

Last week I found out: Yes, it can. It really is that good.

I spent the week with outfitter Maers & Goldman in Córdoba, Argentina, on a mission to photograph every angle of their operation, and of course to slip in a little hunting as well. The visuals were stunning, but I felt like still photos alone didn't do the hunting justice. Even when I caught a flock of 50 doves in the frame, that didn't convey the relentless intensity of the flight. What to do?

Answer: time-lapse.

Last Friday we arranged for the two best shooters in our group, Lex and Ken, to hunt together (hunters usually hunt alone there, though in a big, social line along the edge of a farm field, as we do here). I put my camera on a tripod behind them and set it to take one photo every second for 15 minutes - 900 frames.

The hunt turned out to be pretty average for the week - the big day had been Thursday. So what does average look like? The video is below - 1:12 of time-lapse. Be sure to watch to the end to see the numbers!



© Holly A. Heyser 2016

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

The Florida bear hunting debate - an op-ed for the Tampa Tribune

If you watch debates about hunting all over the country, which I do because the future of hunting matters to me A LOT, you'll see a pattern: bear hunting is under attack.

It's an issue because bear populations are thriving, and everywhere state game agencies try to re-open bear seasons or increase quotas, the Humane Society of the United States argues that their science is all wrong and the population increases are a figment of their imaginations.

Right. Tell that to anyone who lives in bear country.

This Saturday, Florida opens its first bear season since 1994, and the anti-hunting hysteria is thick, so I decided to wade in with a little commentary on the subject. You can read it here in the Tampa Tribune.

© Holly A. Heyser 2015

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

What early teal season looks like: an interactive map

We don't have an early teal season in California, so I actually have no clue what it looks like.

But I do know how to find where all the action is: All you have to do is look at band recoveries, so I did just that, just for funsies, because I'm an OCD Dutch Virgo data nerd.

The map below is all the banded teal recovered by hunters in September of 2014 (data for 2015 isn't yet available). The color coding is really complex: Blue dots are blue-winged teal, green dots are green-wings and red dots are cinnamons. Click on the dot and you can see how old the bird was and where it was banded - you can even click through to its banding location.

One caveat: Sometimes the map will show birds being shot in weird locations, or in places where they shouldn't be shot, as in not in season. Keep in mind that all recovery information is reported by humans who might be confused about what they're reporting (the USGS Bird Banding Laboratory wants to know where you shot the bird, not where you live), imprecise (I've seen banded birds allegedly shot at busy urban intersections), or merely cagey ("I ain't putting no X on no stinkin' map!").

But imperfect as it is, it's still fun stuff. Enjoy!

 

© Holly A. Heyser 2015

Saturday, August 1, 2015

My bird of regret - a column for Shotgun Life

You never know what's going to capture your imagination the most when you hunt strange birds in a strange place. The bird that did that for me in New Zealand earlier this summer is the subject of my latest column for Shotgun Life.

© Holly A. Heyser 2015

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Baiting, sluicing and other no-no's ... or are they? A column for Shotgun Life.

United States: Baiting ducks, illegal. Sluicing ducks, legal (but frowned upon). And on the other side of the Equator in New Zealand? The opposite.

Hunting in another country is a great opportunity not just to hunt new animals, but to think about laws and ethics and beliefs - why they exist, what benefit they have. That, my friends, is the subject of my latest column in Shotgun Life.

© Holly A. Heyser 2015

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

A lesson in duck identification - a column for Shotgun Life

I've heard some people say you have no business hunting ducks if you can't accurately identify the species you're shooting at every single time.

Obviously that's ideal, but it's not very real-world. I've hunted with plenty of seasoned veterans who weren't sure exactly what species it was - was it a gadwall or a hen wigeon that just zipped through the spread in the pre-dawn light? But they knew it was a duck, and they knew it wasn't a duck they couldn't shoot, e.g. a pintail if they'd already gotten their limit.

I think that's OK. But I've learned that not being too sure has its risks, as you'll see in my latest column for Shotgun Life.

© Holly A. Heyser 2015

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Vegetarians hunting: a column for Shotgun Life

So, these three vegetarians went hunting at a super-awesome duck club... Click here to read more in my latest column for Shotgun Life.

© Holly A. Heyser 2015

Sunday, February 1, 2015

The coolest jump shooting ever - a column for Shotgun Life

Ever have one of those hunts where something so awesome happens that it leaves you dazed and grinning for days? I did, and here's what went down.

© Holly A. Heyser 2015

Thursday, January 1, 2015

About women duck hunters - a column for Shotgun Life

Happy New Year, everyone!

I had a couple things happen last year during duck hunts that got me thinking about the state of women duck hunters. You can check out my Shotgun Life column about it here, and I'd be very interested to here your thoughts, either in comments on the column (it uses a Facebook interface) or back here.

I didn't address the causes of the issues I wrote about, so I'd love to hear your thoughts on that topic. Or if you think I'm completely full of B.S. on the topic, you're welcome to say that as well.

© Holly A. Heyser 2015

Friday, December 12, 2014

The View from a Hunt: on Altruism and Ruddy Ducks

It was a hunt where nothing seemed to be going right.

My calling had helped hook three mallards on their way to some rice fields, only for me to whiff when they floated over our blind.

I'd received the supreme blessing of having two Aleutians randomly fly super low over me and my buddy Charlie in open water, only to hear that worst of all noises: click.

Aaaand I heard that sound one more time with my bead on the crimson head of a canvasback. (And yes, it was operator error - so was the other one.)

I admit it: I sulked for a while after that. I lay back in my hunting kayak, pulled some camo netting over my body, shut my eyes and allowed myself to drift in and out of sleep. It was pretty much a self-imposed time out. It's actually a really effective cure for a bad mood, by the way - not sure why we think of it as a kid thing.

Anyway, at some point, my buddy Charlie saw me moving around in my little nest and said we should move because all the action was 100 yards away, so I picked myself up and paddled to the other spot.

The first thing I noticed there was a dead grebe floating in the water. And about ten yards from that, there was a dead hen ruddy duck on the shoreline. I let them be, lest one careless touch put them, legally, in my possession.

After Charlie finished setting up the decoys, we settled back into tule patches and waited for the ducks to come.

Before long, there were ruddies and buffleheads all around us, but neither of us was interested in shooting them. Ruddies can taste good, but that was highly unlikely to be the case where we were hunting them. And buffies just taste terrible unless you're willing to jump through hoops to make them taste good, and for that little meat, it's just not worth it.

We kept watching, hoping something tasty like a canvasback would wander in, when something weird happened. Maybe 20 feet in front of me, I saw a drake ruddy pulling himself ashore, just five feet from where the dead hen was.

God, he was graceless. Divers really aren't made for land. He kind of hurled himself against the shore repeatedly like a penguin, using his bill occasionally to pull himself in. I wondered for a moment if he would go over to the hen - his mate, perhaps? - but he didn't. He just settled onto a little hump of earth and began preening.

It was as he was settling in that I saw the reason for at least some of his gracelessness: His left leg was dragging. Injured.

Normally when I see an injured duck, I shoot it, because I've killed injured ducks before, and usually what you see is ample evidence of starvation and massive infection, particularly when they've been shot in the gut. I'd rather put them out of their misery early in that process. I really, really hate suffering.

But something made me hesitate with this little guy.

It hadn't occurred to me yet that a diver duck with an injured leg can't fly. They have to run a long way on the water to take off. So until his leg healed, assuming it ever healed properly, swimming would be his only defense and his only means of getting to food. Swimming with just one leg.

If I'd thought of this right away, I probably would've shot him.

I looked a short way off shore and there I saw two other drake ruddies swimming around nervously next to their pal on shore. It was pretty obvious to them that Charlie and I were there. If ducks could talk, you know what they would've been saying:

"I don't know, man ... this doesn't look very safe here."

"Yeah, I agree. Bob. Bob! Can we please get the hell out of here???"

Eventually, something spooked them - perhaps it was when Charlie and I spoke to each other quietly - and they went away, leaving behind their buddy who had determined either the humans weren't a threat, or he didn't give a shit because he just wanted to rest and clean up.

Fifteen minutes later, ducks we didn't want to kill once again surrounded us, including some drake ruddies that again came close to the little guy on the shore. It seemed like they were having the same conversation, but the guy on shore wouldn't budge.

So one of his buddies started walking ashore.

I stifled a laugh. This guy wasn't injured, but he was not much more graceful than his injured friend on shore. Hurl, grab, hurl, grab, waddle. Then he found a spot on the little mound where his friend sat and joined him, and they began alternating between preening and napping.

"Charlie!" I whispered.

"What?"

"Check it out!"

And as Charlie watched, more of them joined those two on shore. One more, two more, three. FIVE drake ruddies were sitting there, preening and sleeping just 20 feet from me. They all knew Charlie and I were there, because we kept talking quietly the whole time. They just made a leap of faith that we were no threat to them, despite the fact that we were in a location heavily trodden by duck hunters, many of whom DO shoot ruddies (or at least try to).

A little later, a hen bufflehead swam up too, toodled around on shore a bit, then dipped back into the water and stayed near the boys. 

The injured one is the one on the left in the foreground.

They all stayed there for quite some time, until some ducks Charlie and I did want to shoot flew over.

Those ruddies, so clumsy getting out of the water, shot back into it like little rockets and went about ten feet before the realized we hadn't shot at them. They milled for a bit, as if contemplating returning to shore, then decided to keep going. Better, perhaps, not to push their luck with two gun-toting assholes right there.

As they swam away, I couldn't stop smiling. This was one of the most magical things that has ever happened to me while hunting.

It's always a treat when a non-threatening wild animal ventures close to you, and moreso when he stays even though it's obvious he knows you're there.

But I felt like I'd witnessed something much more than that: I had witnessed five acts of friendship (or at least one or two, followed by a wee bit of herd mentality) in the face of grave danger. Regardless of whether any of it was sparked by the presence of the dead hen, it was absolutely touching.

Now, some people may think I'm anthropomorphizing, and to you I say this: I don't think we should anthropomorphize humans. And yes, I know what the word means. What I'm saying is we think far too highly of ourselves as a species apart from all others, and we seem stunned when animals exhibit traits that are familiar to us, forgetting the fact that we, too, are animals. Duh.

This encounter was, to me, a window into that world we've forgotten - the world where altruism can be found in many species, if we're just lucky enough to see it when it happens.

© Holly A. Heyser 2014

Monday, December 1, 2014

Expectations? My latest column for Shotgun Life.

I've spent the better part of nine duck seasons now trying to temper my expectations going into every hunt.

But this hunt may have ruined me forever.

Check it out - it's my latest column for Shotgun Life.

© Holly A. Heyser 2014

Friday, October 3, 2014

I want to believe (in my dove hunting spot) - a column for Shotgun Life.

Dove season in NorCal last month was, um, pretty lame. For the most part. A spot that performed pretty damned well last year was ... well, that's the subject of my latest column for Shotgun Life.

© Holly A. Heyser 2014

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Banded birds in Cali - an interactive map

In the Fall issue of California Waterfowl Magazine, we did a huge piece on banded ducks and geese that were recovered in California during the 2013-14 duck season, with lots of cool charts and maps, and a video that I posted here last month.

Well, the magazine is done, but I just can't let go of it, so I've spent a bit of my Saturday afternoon creating these interactive maps.

In the first, each dot represents one recovered bird. Just like in Google Maps, you can zoom in and out, and change from map view to satellite view, but the really cool thing is you can click on each dot to find out what species it was, when it was recovered, and when and where it was banded.

One thing to keep in mind: Band recovery data is user-reported, which means the location may be imprecise. So, take the recovery locations with a grain of salt.

The second map is where all the birds in the first map were banded.

Enjoy!




© Holly A. Heyser 2014