Most Recent Radio Show

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

2012 Deer Harvests






Share your deer hunting pictures with us by sending them to willowpineoutdoors@gmail.com.  We'd love to put them up on the site. 

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Willowpine October Newsire












The temperatures have dropped, the leaves have fallen, the moon is full, and the rut is on its way to being in full swing.  It's October and that means it's hunting season.  The Indiana Archery season came in on October 1st, for the Willowpine crew, we've had some ups and downs. One staff member shot a management buck, but he was not found.  Another staffer's arrow caught a limb leaving a doe with a sore belly. Not a single whitetail has yet to be harvested, but sometimes it goes that way.  I'm hoping the deer wounded will live another year, and hoping that a bruiser will find his way into my freezer.  With the November firearm season ahead of us, we know we only have a couple short weeks before the deer start to get very nocturnal.  I also know that come November, I'm going to have to make some hard decisions between a duck blind and deer stand. We hope you, your family, and your friends have the most successful season on the books!










October Newswire Contents
1. 5 Tips to Hunting the Rut
2. Indiana Duck Season Dates
3. A Promise Kept - A Story by Mark Fink
4. Our 5 Picks for Places to Duck Hunt in Indiana
5. Bucks Pro Mount Taxidermy

_______________________________________________________________________







When you’re walking in or out of the woods, take extra precaution to remain unnoticed.  The last thing you need is for the deer to feel pressured around your stand. Here are a few things we suggest you do to take this extra precaution. 

  • Make sure your boots are scent free and don’t wear them until you’re in the field. Spray them with Dead Down Wind or whatever scent eliminator you use when you put them on.
  • Don’t use the trail you expect deer to come on. No need in taking any chance of leaving scent.
  • Rake areas you’re going to walk in on prior to hunting season and right after the leaves fall. 
  • Never spit, urinate, leave cigarette butts, or any other things that may have unnatural scent. Why take the chance? Big deer are smart for a reason, and even though you shot deer with tobacco spit under you before, chances are that the dominate buck will avoid an unidentifiable odor. If you have to pee, use a milk jug, bottle, or creek. 
  • Make sure your stand doesn't make any unwanted noise. 
  • Walk slowly and lightly. Use a flashlight only when necessary. If you enter a field and can see by moonlight, then turn that bad boy off. 
Remember you’re hunting, so it’s important to sneak in and out. Why wear camo if you’re going to announce your presence otherwise? Become one with the environment, and remain unseen. Go in as though the entire hunt depends on it, the truth is that it might. 

Rattling can be a huge asset when you're hunting the rut. Make sure you're scent free, get up in the tree with a big set of antlers, and slam those babies together.   

  • Make sure you get a grunt, weeze, and snort in there. 


  • Get into it... If you're doing it right you'll feel like you actually just fought the biggest deer in the woods. 
  • If you're worried that you spilled a little gas on  your boot, or that the wind just isn't in your favor, then NEVER rattle. A big deer will almost ALWAYS wind a set of fighting bucks. This means he'll come to the fight with the wind in his face. If you're giving off human scent while rattling, then you're hurting your spot more than helping it.  There is no such thing as "Eh, what's it going to hurt?"  It will hurt your chances if you're not scent free. 


  • Use the biggest set of antlers you have. If it sounds like two big deer are fighting it will encourage big deer to come and fight the winner.  If you're just after a good buck, that's ok too. A medium sized deer will come try to fight the winner also.  His chances are better beating a deer that just got done fighting, compared to being the first opponent. 














A lot of guys will put doe and buck urine out as soon as they get to the stand. This can definitely work, but why not when you leave, too?  I've found that when I throw scent out when I get in the stand, the buck will come in very nervously.  If I'm unknowingly giving off human scent, then that's blowing down wind also.  Not only is the buck smelling doe urine, but also my human scent.  So sometimes (especially before rut), I'll toss out some dominant buck urine when I leave the stand. My theory is that this represents that a buck has been in the area right around sunset.  If the buck is territorial he'll eventually start showing up right before dark to see if his ghostly friend shows up again.  The best part is since I've left the stand, the scent is blown downwind without any chance of an added human scent.  Since I started doing this in the 2011 season, I've had shooter bucks under my stand 6 out the 10 times, one day after I've thrown out scent when leaving. Maybe a coincidence, or maybe a trend. So far I've been pleased with my results. 

















Pay attention to the changes in weather and temperatures.  When hunting the rut, the weather can make a huge difference.  I love to hunt the rut on a cold, low wind, blue sky evening. I like a morning with a similar lineup, but add a little frost to make the leaves crunch as they walk into my shooting lane.  Pay attention to the weatherman cause he may change your mind to hunt a day you didn't plan to.

  • There is a storm coming tomorrow, and you should be on the edge of your corn field.  Studies have shown that deer react to barometric pressure. They know when there is a storm coming, and they want to get food in their bellies before it gets there. When the does are in a cut corn field eating, there is sure to be a buck nearby ready to check them.  These studies show that deer begin feeding when the barometric pressures are between 29.80 and 30.29. You can get the barometric pressure for your area at WeatherChannel.com.
  • When it's windy or if there is a slight drizzle, I'd be in a bottom or field edge.  If you're hunting around standing corn, you have to put yourself in the deer's shoes. I know when I've been in standing corn, and I can't hear a thing with all those dried leaves scratching each other. The deer feel the same way.  This can be true in the woods also. The trees and leaves make a lot of noise when it's windy. Hunt a place where deer can hear, and can see their surroundings. Grass fields, crop fields, and open bottoms have always been a good bet for me.


  • Some guys stay home when there is a warm trend in the weather.  Not me, I'm in a tree. Sure you have to go slow as not to get all sweaty, but the deer still need to move. I've had great luck hunting bottoms, water holes, and shady areas when we get the early November warm up.  I almost always notice a 60-70 degree day in late October or early November.  
  • Near the end of October, we always get a full moon. Every year I've deer hunted, I've noticed that the full moon causes the October deer slump. You'll see lots of deer for a week, then the moon starts getting full, and you sit there for 4 hours watching squirrels. Yet there is new sign around my stand, what's going on?  They're moving at night, and there's nothing you can do. You may catch one right before dark, or headed for beds at daylight, but chances are that things will be slow.  If you have a family project to do... do it during the full moon days. Many will debate this, but I'm only going off my own experience. 

When you're hunting the rut, you have to remember that half the equation is the does.  You need to be where the does travel, where they bed, or where they eat.  If you pattern the does, then you're sure to find a buck.
  • Bucks will abandon their normal travel routes, and will begin using the doe travel routes. Sometimes you'll see a smaller and less used trail going along a more heavily used trail. This can almost certainly be a buck trail. It'll usually go through thicker cover, but it will end up at the same place. 
  • Bucks will make fewer rubs and scrapes. They'll also do a whole lot less checking and updating of their rubs/scrapes.  Pre-Rut can be killer hunting around a bunch of rubs and scrapes. When the rut gets in full swing, it may be beneficial to focus less on these areas and more on doe areas. 
Hopefully this article was helpful in some ways.  You can get opinions from thousands of hunters in hundreds of hunting magazines. They all have an issue out right now with tips for hunting the rut.  I've listed the ones I find to be the most important. They're also the things that have helped me the most over the past decade. Use your own judgement and knowledge, and you'll surely be on a nice buck this year!

 _______________________________________________________________________




































Get up-to-date Indiana public FWA hunting location bird harvest counts.  The IDNR seperates the FWA locations by zone. To see these counts Click Here
_______________________________________________________________________








A couple of weeks ago on a Friday afternoon I drove over to the family farm in Illinois that I hunt, to meet up with our “hunt club” members to put up some stands, set out some cameras, and just have a good time talking hunting. Dad had gone over earlier in the day to drop off his camper, and I stayed in it that night. The plan was to meet up early on Saturday AM in town to have some breakfast and put a plan of action together.

Saturday I awoke early, anxious to get a start to the day so I made a cup of coffee, got dressed and slipped into my truck to take a drive around the area to see what might be moving around at first light. The previous evening I did the same drive at last light and counted 50 antlerless and 2 small bucks in an hour’s time. Ten minutes into my drive as I was getting past a finger of woods to reveal the next cut bean field I spied a nice eight-pointer standing in a waterway. At the very same time he decided it was too close for comfort and he ran a hundred yards or so to the back edge of the field and stopped to look at me. After glassing him a few seconds I rolled down the window and stuck my “hand” gun out the window and with a couple snaps of the thumb I said, “Bang, Bang! If you keep hanging around during the daytime I’m going to get you!” The buck seemed to dismiss me as he stood there and then he melted into the wooded edge of the field.

After breakfast we loaded up some stands and ladder sticks and off we went. The first place we hung a stand was in a place I call the Hub and have wanted to put a stand there since the first time I laid eyes on it. It’s located in a 30 yard wide strip of woods and briars that runs north and south and splits a corn and bean field. On the North end of the strip about 300 yards there is a 40 acre CRP field and about a 60 acre woodlot loaded with White Oak trees. On the south end of the Hub are more strips of woods and briars going in three different directions with a creek in the East to West running strip. All of these strips are connecting AG fields and other woodlots so IMO, it should be a deer highway. We managed to get a few more stands up by 2PM when someone in our group suggested that we call it a day and take advantage of the somewhat cool calm weather and hunt the evening. I had not really planned to hunt but I did bring my hunting gear and bought my archery license the night before, so I was good to go for a hunt. I was pretty tired but getting in a tree for the first time this year sounded pretty good! Someone asked where I wanted to sit and I said I would like to go to the Hub stand and wait for that nice 8 I saw that morning to come through so I could kill him. The Hub stand is located about 500 to 600 yards NW of where I spotted that buck earlier that day.

One hour later I was in my hunting clothes and settled in The Hub Stand for the evening. The wind had been out of the SW all day and I was expecting to see deer come from out of the creek to the South and take to the fields. It was a very uneventful sit until a few minutes before sunset when I looked behind me to the South in time to see two big nannies, each with a young one in tow coming from the creek. Following up right behind them I spotted a small six or eight point buck. The Doe and yearlings came up the main trail through the strip I was sitting in and when they got near my stand, they slowed way down and started smelling everything. They were obviously alerted to all of the scent we had left hanging this stand. They ended up directly below my stand and getting very nervous with each whiff, I just knew I was going to get busted at any moment. I considered shooting one of the big nannies, but decided to hold off for tonight to see what might happen. The two nannies decided that they didn’t care much for what they smelled and walked on to the north at a brisk walk and they never saw me…whew what a relief!


Mark Fink with his Buck
Finally I was able to turn around to look to the South and try to see what the small buck was doing. It took a minute or so to locate him and as I was watching him he kept looking towards the creek that he had just came from. Now you know what I’m thinking, must be another deer coming…sure enough as I am watching that trail I catch movement and see two sets of antlers coming up out of the creek. I train my binos on the first buck, it is a small six, then I move to the next one and wow it’s a pretty decent looking buck. Wait a minute, the more I look at him I suddenly realize this is the same buck I had spotted this AM!
He stopped there for what seemed like a long time and then proceeded to walk up the same main trail that the Doe and Yearlings had just walked. I thought to myself, should I? It’s my first sit and I have a week off planned so I can hunt the rut over here, and I know there are much bigger deer running around.  However, I did promise that I would get him if he kept hanging around during the daytime…HMMM, AW what the heck! I grabbed my bow and when I had a tree between us came to full draw, and at about ten yards I let it fly. I’m far from a great bow shot, but the arrow appeared to be true. He ran about 10 yards and stopped to figure out what just happened. About 45 seconds later he got the wobbles and tipped over. 

Upon field dressing I discovered a perfect X right through the center of his heart! If I had not had the encounter with him that morning, and made that promise, I most likely would not have taken the shot. The way it all came together I just had to. So now I hunt does and bide my time for the IL firearms season, maybe I can pattern a couple good ones by then.

Here is one of only two photos I have of this buck. Sorry for the poor quality, I was so tired from the day of activities I didn’t have a clear enough mind to get a good photo…all I wanted to do was get him cut up and in the cooler so I could go home. After arriving home and caping the head, I finally got to bed at 3:30AM.

By Mark Fink, Indiana

**Share your story with us by Emailing Us.
_______________________________________________________________________





The number one question I get when I tell someone I duck hunt is, "Really? In Indiana? Where do you go?"  Now I wont give away my secret spots on a public website, but I will help point like minded folks in the right direction.  People are very protective of their favorite places, and in some aspects for very good reason. However everything listed is public, and can be found on the IDNR website.  Indiana Fish & Game printed a similar list a few years ago, but I do believe they left out a few that should have been listed. Below are the 5 best places I've duck hunted in Indiana. 

For maps, dates, directions, rules, and regulations follow the link below each location to visit their spot on the IDNR website.   



Goose Pond FWA


Willow Slough

Monroe Lake / Stillwater Marsh



Kankakee FWA



Hovey Lake FWA

_______________________________________________________________________







For the last year or so I've had the privilege of doing artwork for Todd Buchanan at Buck's Pro Mount Taxidermy.  I enjoy doing the artwork for him because I'm always amazed by the detail living within his mounts. He'll send me a picture to add a background to, and I can spend a half hour just admiring the work.  He is truly and artist, and when it comes to your memories within a mount, I'd put my trust in Buck's. BPMT is located in Fairland, IN.  You can check out some of his mounts below, and also on the web by clicking the following link. Buck's Pro Mount Taxidermy. Contact information and other details are also on his site.


From the Buck's Pro Mount Taxidermy Website:

"Here at Buck's Pro Mount Taxidermy we strive to produce some of the most artistic wildlife art in the industry.  Unlike many other studios, we put as much time and effort into studying wildlife and references as we do in producing taxidermy pieces.

It is our belief that the study of animals and anatomy go hand in hand when producing quality wildlife art.  This alone is what sets us apart from the others and it shows in your trophy.  Taxidermy is a form of art and we make every effort to make your once in a lifetime trophy a piece of art to be admired for years to come.  Here at Buck's Pro mount Taxidermy your hard earned trophy will receive the highest quality craftsmanship and attention to detail.  Why, after the money spent on that once in a lifetime hunt and taking that once in a lifetime trophy would you want to take a chance with sub standard taxidermy work?  You want a taxidermist who will best represent your hard work and memories of the hunt. By choosing Buck's Pro Mount Taxidermy you have made a wise decision that you will not regret."






























































Buck's Pro Mount Taxidermy
9039 Punkinvine Rd. 
Fairland, IN  46126
317.861.4783

_______________________________________________________________________








We appreciate your taking the time to read Willowpine Outdoors' October Newswire. We also very much appreciate your support in WPO. As mentioned above, we're always looking for people interested in contributing their writing, taking pictures, adding videos, etc. If you think you might like to do this, then please shoot us an email at willowpineoutdoors@gmail.com.  If you haven't already, please take a moment to add us as a friend on Facebook. If you like what we're doing, and want to support us, the best way is to tell a friend! Always remember that Nature provides a free lunch, but only if we can control our appetite.  - Joey W. Buttram, Willowpine Outdoors

Willowpine Outdoors Facebook




_______________________________________________________________________


Thursday, October 18, 2012

Why Can't We Move the Deer Crossing Signs?








This ditzy lady calls into a North Dakota radio station asking why they allow deer crossings on interstates and high traffic areas.  She just can't make sense of why they would allow the deer to cross there. 

Yes folks, this is the world we're living in.  Enjoy!

Video below or you can follow this LINK to the video on YouTube.






Monday, October 15, 2012

Basic and Peculiar Hunting Blinds

When you talk hunting blinds, you usually talk about these expansive smaller versions of homes in the woods. However, the topic itself can be debated thoroughly by folks who think that blinds with indoor amenities don't withstand the idea of traditional hunting.  Others say it's just an extension of the the future and what's to come in hunting. Myself, I prefer a 20' Comfort Zone ladder stand, a Final Approach layout blind, and a boat covered in Cabela's Northern Flight Marsh Grass.  I feel that part of the challenge within hunting is adapting to the natural elements and weather conditions. When temperatures are near 10 degrees,  my beard frozen to my face, and my feet so cold they hurt, it seems to me that satellite TV and a floor heater may not be so bad, but I feel the fair chase should include sharing the elements with the animal you're seeking.  Below are some examples of some basic and quite peculiar blinds. Some are very simple, and some are completely over the top.  Nonetheless, they are all out there filled with hunters awaiting their prey.




































































































































































































































































































































































































Cypress Run Timber Company




Friday, September 28, 2012

Willowpine September Newswire














It's finally almost time to head for the tree stand, and if you're like us, then you can barely wait.  Many Native Americans believe that when you're destined to harvest a big deer, it will come to you in your dreams before the hunt.  It's said that many Natives hunt only when an animal comes to them in their dream. Recently, I harvested a nice big non-typical in one of my dreams. In the dream, I walked up on the buck, paid my respect to the animal, and got down to see the animal's antlers. The last thing I saw in the dream was my arrow lodged within its torso. Is my dream a premonition? I don't know, but I guess in October we'll find out.




September Newswire Contents
- Teal Season Review
- Deer Season
- Guardian Firearms
- Our Top 8 Compound Bows for 2012

_______________________________________________________________________







The September Blue and Green Winged Teal season has come and past for us here in Indiana.  We were able to hit the water a few times, and it ended up being pretty good for us.  We hit several different public areas including Goose Pond in Linton, IN, Province Pond in New Castle, IN, and a couple private spots.Opening weekend we didn't do all that great.  We tried for mostly geese, but most of the locals we usually hunt were on cut cornfields.  With this summer's drought, I think it threw our normal hay field out of whack. With so much corn out, the birds headed for that instead.




   The best day we had was Wednesday September 12. Dan New and I headed down to Goose Pond for the Wednesday evening draw.  The draw goes at 11:00AM, and parties of 2,3,or 4 hunt until sunset. There were about 12 parties of 3 or 4 guys. We got lucky and won first pick. We went to the same pool that we got rained out of the week before.  The party with the second pick also chose the same pool that Dan and I picked.  This was our first hunt to really try out our newly built marsh boats.  Danny and I split up heading for separate patches of smartweed.  I was cutting back some smartweed to add to my boat for natural cover when I started noticing blue wings zipping by. I decided I needed to get a handful of decoys out and get started ASAP.  With other hunters getting to their spots, I figured the birds were being frantically pushed from their cover. I wasn't hidden as good as I would've liked, but the birds flying by were shootable.  It wasn't a half hour into the hunt when I had a pair of Blue Wingers heading right for my dekes.  They dipped low, soaring only inches off the water to my right.  I had to swing all the way around to my right to get a shot. The bead on the end of my gun was nestled on the second bird. BAM and the teal hit the water.  My first blue winged teal, and my first duck of 2012.  Fifteen minutes later I had a single come in high flying, but dipped low as soon as the duck saw my decoys. This bird also made a quick drop and met my #4 steel shot. I had only been out 45 minutes and I had two ducks with two to go.  Danny had shot a couple times, but I didn't see ducks hit water.  I threw out a couple more decoys as I noticed some ducks landing in bigger groups. No longer than I got back in my boat that I had another pair come in to my left.  The ducks split the smart weed patch I was sitting in. One headed to the right while the other flew to the left, I pulled up and shot the one on the left.  Within an hour I was a bird away from my limit.  I decided to wait for a drake, because all  that I had shot were hens. Teal hens out number teal drakes, so it's not unusual to shoot mostly hens. After letting a couple of hens fly, I called over to Danny.  I didn't want him to miss out.  He paddled his boat over, set up, and again within 15 minutes he dropped his first ever teal. Shortly after Danny dropped another blue wing hen.  Danny has been waiting for now 4 years to get a teal, and it wasn't until this day (his birthday) that he bagged his first teal. I got too picky waiting for the drake, and only ended up with 3.  We had to leave a little early because Danny's family was throwing a party for his birthday back in Danville.  Happy with our bounty, we decided to head on home.

The day payed off as we learned a some things about teal hunting, we learned our rebuilt boats work, and we got to hunt a pool that we've never hunted.  Only bad thing is that we have to wait until November 3rd for duck season to come back in! Unlike 2011, I feel that 2012 is going to be a great waterfowl season.

















_______________________________________________________________________






There are a few changes to this years deer season.  We discussed the rule changes in the August Newswire. The dates are usually about the same each year, but there are a few differences this year. Dates are listed below.
















For Bag Limits, Rules, Regulations, and Other Info check out the Indiana Hunting and Trapping Guide at Indiana Hunting & Trapping Guide









_______________________________________________________________________






When I was a kid I remember going out to Putnam County to go through a firearms course.  My Great Uncle Jim Baugh was the instructor. I remember my cousin Gayle and I took the course together, and to this day things still stick with me.  One thing that really stuck out to me was when Uncle Jim told everyone to watch the jug of water as he shot it with a .357 revolver. He lined up the gun, pulled the trigger, and the water jug exploded.  He looked back at us kids and said "that jug of water exploding is a near equivalent of what would happen to a human being shot in the head, and this is why we have to put safety first".  From that day forward I had a new respect for firearms.






Since then my Great Uncle Jim Baugh has passed away, but his passion for firearms and firearms safety lives on in his son and nephew my cousins Jerrod Baugh and Justin Tate.  Together they have created Guardian Firearm Academy.  The training takes place at none other than Jim Baugh Firearm Shooting Range in Greencastle, IN.  The course is not only for people just starting out, but it can be for seasoned shooters as well. If you or someone you know may be interested in doing a Firearms training  course, then follow the link or email below for more information.  These courses may one day save your life.


From the Guardian Firearms Academy Website:

"The Guardian Firearms Academy is training based in the use of firearms for defensive purposes. They offer the following classes... 
  • NRA Basic Pistol
  • Defensive Carry Pistol
  • Defensive Rifle
  • Shotgun Home Defense
  • Private Instruction
A registration form, photocopy of your ID, Handgun License, and deposit of 50% of the tuition are due at least two weeks before the class starts. Student positions are limited, places are held on a first come basis. Participants must be 18 years of age or older for the Defensive Shooting Classes. Requirements for the NRA Basic Pistol Class are a minimum age of 14 and accompanied in class by a parent.
Requirements for Defensive firearms training classes, and any time you are transporting a handgun to class, is a License to Carry a Handgun (Indiana or any other reciprocity state)."

Website:

Facebook:

Email Contact:

_______________________________________________________________________

Every year the compound bow industry puts out new top of line bows.  Usually these bows are only slightly tweaked from the previous years.  As we embrace the future of hunting we really have no idea what to expect. I can only hope that we keep it somewhat traditional, and not let electronics take over. So far the hunting industry has done that. I do believe that as hunting technology increases, we're going to have to plateau somewhere.  It may take 30 more years, but at some point we'll get as technologically advanced as we can get.

Below are our top 8 choices for new bows in 2012. We've tried to display bows in all price ranges, we've got them from $399 - $1400. If you're in the market for a new bow, we recommend one of these.



For more information on the above bows, check out their websites.
Mission Archery
Mathews Archery
PSE Archery
Hoyt Archery
Bowtech Archery
Bear Archery
Parker Bows
Quest Bowhunting

_______________________________________________________________________



We appreciate your taking the time to read Willowpine Outdoors' September Newswire. We also very much appreciate your support in WPO. As mentioned above, we're always looking for people interested in contributing their writing, taking pictures, adding videos, etc. If you think you might like to do this, then please shoot us an email at willowpineoutdoors@gmail.com.  If you haven't already, please take a moment to add us as a friend on Facebook. If you like what we're doing, and want to support us, the best way is to tell a friend! Always remember that Nature provides a free lunch, but only if we can control our appetite.  - Joey W. Buttram, Willowpine Outdoors

Willowpine Outdoors Facebook






_______________________________________________________________________