Archive for October, 2009

If it were real, I’d be afraid to hunt it

Friday, October 30, 2009

bigmoose.jpgIt’s amazing what people can do with photo-editing software.

The accompanying photo and another one allegedly from the same “sequence” have been making the rounds on the Internet.

The moose, estimated by the “photographer” to have been 8 feet tall at the shoulder and 12 feet tall at the rack, was supposedly roaming the woods near Elliot Lake, Ontario, when its picture was taken.

I’ve seen moose — big ones — “up close and personal” in Yellowstone National Park. Believe me, they’re huge. But they ain’t that huge. 

What a waste — poaching grizzly bears for their claws!

Thursday, October 29, 2009

grizclaws1.JPGIn the past month, two Montana grizzly bears have been found dead, their claws removed.

According to the Great Falls Tribune, the latest kill turned up Oct. 18 on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation. The first was found Oct. 1 on the Lewis and Clark National Forest.

The black market for grizzly claws must be lucrative, indeed, for people to risk poaching bears. Killing a griz in the lower 48 states is a violation of the federal Endangered Species Act.

Here’s hoping they find the perpetrators. And throw the book at ‘em.

Coyotes attack, kill Canadian singer

Thursday, October 29, 2009

taylormitchell.jpgBetween gigs in Canada’s Maritime Provinces, 19-year-old recording artist Taylor Mitchell took a walk in the woods.

Two coyotes attacked her. Hikers and rangers heard her screams and ran to her aid. Airlifted to a hospital “with bites all over her body,” she later died. The Ottawa Citizen has the full story.

Mitchell was attacked as she hiked the popular Skyline Trail in Nova Scotia’s Cape Breton Highlands National Park. People who knew her said she loved the outdoors.

Hat tip: J.R. Absher at The Outdoor Pressroom.

Spawning colors brighten fall brook-trout fishing

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

brookspawn.jpgFor sheer eye candy, few things can beat the sight of a brook trout in spawning colors.

The red spots with blue halos, the white-edged orange fins and the vermilion flanks are enough to put a smile on any angler’s face. The spawn is going on right now. Makes me want to go fishing…

Fayette fatality: Hunting-related or not?

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

From Gazette reporter Rusty Marks:

Fayette County authorities are looking into the death of a Greenbrier County man who was shot near Springdale on Monday.

Clarence Edward Stroud III, 50, of Rainelle was found Monday evening on property he owns in Fayette County, according to a press release issued by Fayette County Sheriff Steve Kessler.

Authorities believe Stroud had been hunting on the property when he was struck in the chest and face by what appeared to be the blasts of a shotgun.

Authorities believe Stroud was killed sometime between 1:30 and 5:30 p.m. Monday. Kessler said authorities are treating the death as a homicide.

Division of Natural Resources spokesman Hoy Murphy said there is no fall turkey season in Fayette County this year.

Fayette County sheriff’s deputies, troopers from the Oak Hill State Police detachment and conservation officers from the DNR are investigating.

Anyone with information about the shooting is asked to call the Fayette County 911 Center at 304-574-3590, Crime Stoppers at 304-255-STOP or the Fayette County sheriff’s office at 304-574-4216. Information may also be submitted to the Crime Tips section of the sheriff’s department Web site, www.fayettesheriffwv.net.

A harbinger of winter fishing to come?

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

elkwal.jpgJeff Hansbarger, a Division of Natural Resources fisheries biologist, shocked up this nice 33-inch walleye during a recent electrofishing survey on the Elk River in Clay County.

That section of the Elk has been known to harbor some bruising walleyes. Apparently it still does.

DNR busts eight Ohioans for bear baiting in W.Va.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

bearpoach.jpgFrom a DNR news release. The good news, I suppose, is that they caught these guys. The bad news is that they were doing it in the first place: 

A lengthy bear poaching investigation was brought to a conclusion Oct. 22 and Oct. 25, when West Virginia Division of Natural Resources (WVDNR) conservation officers and Wildlife Resources personnel apprehended a group of eight hunters in Nicholas County for using bait to lure black bear into sites where they could be shot from elevated and camouflaged stands. It is illegal to bait black bear in West Virginia.

“This group of hunters, all of whom were residents of Ohio, had been participating in this type of illegal activity for a period of several years,” said Capt. Michael Waugh of the WVDNR District 3 Office in Elkins. “They had purchased their bait, which consisted of donuts and corn, from multiple out-of-state vendors. The bait was then hauled into the area by truck and distributed to the bait sites using all-terrain vehicles. This out-of-state purchase and interstate transport of the bait is believed to have been an effort on the part of the poachers to conceal the quantities of bait, the purposes for which it was being purchased, and to avert suspicion in the areas they were baiting.”

Seven baited shooting sites were located by Conservation Officers D. Duffield, T.L. White and Wildlife Manager Tom Pratt when they entered the woods in Nicholas County near Summersville. On Oct. 22, five of the hunters were apprehended at a cabin used as a base camp from which to stage these illegal activities. As the individual hunters were located and removed from the elevated shooting platforms, Sgt. C.R. Johnson conducted interviews which led to additional information and the discovery of multiple baited black bear kills from previous years.

Two large adult black bears were seized at the base camp location as well as large quantities of bait stored for future use. The first was a large male bear that was estimated to weigh in excess of 240 pounds. The second was a large three-to-four-year-old female estimated to weigh more than 130 pounds. Two additional black bears were killed at the bait sites earlier and had already been removed from the base camp to locations outside the borders of West Virginia. Requests for assistance in recovering these black bears have been made to the US Fish and Wildlife Service under the provisions of the Lacey Act.

In conjunction with the Nicholas County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, charges were lodged against the participants in this illegal baiting scheme on Friday, Oct. 23. The suspects chose to enter pleas to these charges at the arraignment. The charges lodged included:

  • David B. Moore, Felicity, Ohio – two counts of hunting bear over bait, fines of $2319 and 100 days in jail suspended, contingent upon payment of fines and costs.
  • Eric W. Lykins, Loveland, Ohio – one count of killing a bear over bait on 10/21/09 and one count of hunting bear over bait on 10/17/09, fines of $2319, replacement costs of $500 and 100 days in jail suspended contingent upon payment of fines and costs.
  • James E. Moore, New Richmond, Ohio – two counts of hunting bear over bait, fines of $2319 and 100 days in jail suspended contingent upon payment of fines and costs.
  • Frank J. Burns, New Richmond, Ohio – one count of killing a bear over bait on 10/23/09 and one count of hunting bear over bait on 10/17/09, fines of $2319, replacement costs of $500 and 100 days in jail suspended contingent upon payment of fines and costs.
  • Carl M. Ramsey, Amelia, Ohio – one count of killing a bear over bait on 10/21/09 and 1) count of hunting bear over bait on 10/17/09, fines of $2319, replacement costs of $500 and 100 days in jail suspended contingent upon payment of fines and costs.

The investigation continued and, on Oct. 25, three additional Ohio residents were found by DNR Sgt. C.R. Johnson, CO T.L. White and CO Dwayne Duffield and cited for violations of the West Virginia bear law. They are:

  • Randy Durbin, New Richmond,Ohio – one count of taking a black bear over bait on 10/17/09and one count of hunting black bear over bait on 10/25/08.Durbin was arraigned by telephone and entered a plea to these charges on 10/26/09.Hewas assessed a penalty of $2,319 and a $500 replacement fee.This individual surrendered the remains ofone black bear to the conservation officers.
  • Anthony Parker of Sardinia, Ohio – cited for one count of taking a black bear over bait on 10/19/09 and one count of illegally possessing parts of a black bear on 10/20/09.His arraignment is pending.This individual surrendered the remains ofone black bear to the conservation officers.
  • Robert Bradfordof Amelia, Ohio – cited for one count of hunting black bear over bait on 10/27/08 and one count of illegally possessing parts of a black bear on 10/20/09. His arraignment is pending

Also, based upon information provided by Sgt. Johnson, on 10/26/2009, David Moore of New Richmond, Ohio, surrendered parts of three black bears that had been taken over bait in West Virginia to Ohio wildlife officers.  No charges have been filed at this time.

“This investigation serves as a classic reminder that the Division of Natural Resources and its employees are ever mindful of their charge to protect the natural resources, including the wildlife, of the State of West Virginia for the benefit and enjoyment of our citizens and their children,” said Capt. Waugh.

Turkey hunter killed in W.Va.’s Eastern Panhandle

Monday, October 26, 2009

From the Associated Press:

The Division of Natural Resources says a West Virginia turkey hunter was shot and killed on the first day of the fall season.

DNR Conservation Officer Michael Lott says Herald Hart Bennett, 26, of Charles Town, was shot about 8:30 a.m. Saturday in the Fox’s Hollow area of Hampshire County.

Lott was hit in the right side by a rifle bullet fired by David Clarke Butler, 61, of Inwood. The two men were hunting from the same hunting camp.

Lott says Butler was shooting at a turkey and missed, with the bullet hitting Bennett, who was walking on a roadway below.

The DNR says heavy brush, rain and fog contributed to the shooting. Charges are expected to be filed.

Dunkard’s polluters should pay dearly

Monday, October 26, 2009

dunkard2.jpgThis week’s Sunday Gazette-Mail column: 

Dunkard Creek used to be a pretty decent place to fish.

Not any more. It’s dead. Pollution killed it.

Officials of the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection won’t admit that — at least not in so many words. After a lot of head scratching and water sampling, they determined that golden algae killed off Dunkard’s muskellunge, bass, minnows, mussels, crayfish and insects, 190 species in all.

Technically the DEP inspectors probably are correct that toxic algae did the dirty work, but focusing the blame on algae is sort of like saying an aggressive overgrowth of cells caused someone to die of lung cancer. It leaves out one important piece of information: What caused the cells to grow in the first place? Smoking? Asbestos exposure?

The algae that killed Dunkard’s fish don’t bloom in fresh water. They require salty or brackish water before they grow abundant enough to become a toxic menace.

Inspectors who tested Dunkard’s water during the late-August fish kill found oodles of salty water. The water’s ability to conduct electricity (one measure of saltiness) had skyrocketed to 56 times normal. Readings of chlorides and dissolved solids, two other measures, had reached 14 and 16 times normal, respectively.

A disgusted fisherman, writing on the WVAngler.com Web site, called the readings “higher than the Atlantic Ocean’s. One good thing is that they weren’t higher than the Dead Sea’s.”

Sampling data indicate that the saltiness came from Consol Energy’s Blacksville No. 2 coal mine. Exactly how the water got that salty isn’t yet confirmed, but it has been reported that Consol had contracted to dispose of gas-drilling “frack water” in some of the company’s abandoned deep mines. Frack water, for those of you unfamiliar with the term, is chemical-saturated water used to fracture rock strata in deep gas wells. It can’t legally be dumped into streams because it’s so high in chlorides and dissolved solids.

The truth will come out eventually. It’s already clear – abundantly so – that someone messed up badly.

Lawyers will probably decide who’s to blame. Rather than anger the coal or gas industries, DEP officials might opt for the weasel route: impose a slap-on-the-wrist fine to whomever is responsible, let the federal government step in and administer some stiffer punishment, or punt the matter wholly over to the courts.

I only hope that when it comes, the magnitude of the punishment matches the magnitude of the disaster. The Dunkard spill wrecked an entire ecosystem. Restoration and recovery could take years or even decades.

In 2006, a CSX Corp. train derailed in Alabama, spilling carloads of soybeans into tiny Yellowleaf Creek. The decaying beans robbed the stream of its oxygen, killing fish, mussels and snails. CSX paid $491,976 in fines and damages.

Also in 2006, a Norfolk Southern train derailed near Portage Run, a top-notch trout stream in north-central Pennsylvania. Forty-seven thousand gallons of lye spilled into the creek, killing an estimated 571,000 fish in Portage Run and in 5 miles of Sinnemahoning Creek. Norfolk Southern eventually paid $7.35 million in fines and compensation.

When they have actually chosen to fine polluters, West Virginia’s environmental regulators have historically tended to wield a light hand. That simply won’t do this time.

Dunkard Creek’s killers need to pay, and they need to pay dearly.

Sissonville angler lands 60-pound Kanawha R. catfish

Sunday, October 25, 2009

hagycat.jpgCongratulations to Dustin Hagy of Sissonville for catching one of the biggest catfish seen in West Virginia in quite a while.

Hagy, 23, landed the 60-pound flathead Oct. 5 from the Kanawha River in Dunbar. He was fishing from the bank at the time, using a 9-inch skipjack herring for bait.

I have the full story here, in the Sunday Gazette-Mail.

One of the coolest things about Hagy’s story is that he was able to release the beast alive, even after having it out of the water for the better part of an hour. Catfish are tough!