Archive for the ‘Blogging’ Category

Comment of The Year

Friday, January 27, 2012

The other day’s post about the elderly gent who managed on two occasions to corner and capture a wild turkey has given rise to my nominee for Comment of the Year.

I monitor all the comments to my blog, and this is easily the most entertaining one I’ve had in more than four years. The commenter identified himself as “Andy.” Enjoy Andy’s comment:

I caught a small doe one time.
It was after the big snow in January ’96 and I found it in the fenced in side yard eating my rhododendrons and I thought I would teach it a lesson. I ran screaming off the porch and it took off but because of the deep snow it couldn’t jump the fence. It turned all confused and ran straight at me.
I said, “I’ll teach you a lesson you’ll never forget” and tackled it. Just as I grabbed on she twisted her hind quarters and gave me a swift kick in the “you know what.” At that moment I also said to myself, “Maybe that’s why cougars jump on their backs.”
Luckily I had a thick coat on and no harm was done to me. Not sure if the deer learned her lesson, but I sure did.

 

A season’s greeting

Monday, December 26, 2011

I sure hope everyone had a joyous Christmas and a happy holiday season.

It’s nice to be back after a couple of days away. Funny thing about blogging — once you get into the rhythm of posting every day, taking a day or two off feels kind of funny.

So here we are, with the year winding down. And what a year it has been! This year, you kind folks visited the Woods & Waters blog more than 300,000 times. That’s more visits than in the first three years of the blog combined.

The number of comments grew sharply, too. That’s also a credit to you readers. It’s clear that you care passionately about outdoors-related subjects, and you’re willing to share your passion with others. I like it when readers comment; it helps us all to learn. As brilliant (cough, cough) as I try to make my posts, you improve them when you bring different points of view to them in your comments.

Thanks again for helping to make Woods & Waters a well-read blog.

Thank you!!!

Monday, November 7, 2011

Wow. Exciting things are happening at Woods & Waters Online!

This past weekend, our hit counter passed the quarter million mark for the year. A few days before that, our hit counter passed the half-million mark since I started the blog in 2008.

Readership has built slowly but steadily. From just 5,000 hits the first year, we accelerated to 60,000 in 2009, to 193,000 in 2010,  and to 253,000 (and counting) so far this year.

So take a bow, folks! You, the loyal readers, have made it happen. Your readership inspires me to work on the blog each day — to scour the Internet for items that might be of interest, and to check in several times a day to moderate comments. Thank you for making the work worthwhile.

This is what makes my job fun

Friday, October 14, 2011

I’m 100 miles out of the office this morning, checking out how a West Virginia fisheries biologist uses underwater sensors to track muskellunge movements in one of the state’s lakes — sort of the same way the U.S. Navy uses underwater sensors to track other countries’ submarines.  More on that in a future Woods & Waters post.

Meanwhile, check back here late this afternoon for today’s post. Thanks!

Returned from the wilds

Saturday, July 2, 2011

As you might have been able to tell from the previous post, I’ve been in West Virginia’s Eastern Panhandle for a few days. My family and I cut our vacation a little short because of a medical emergency, but things have settled down a bit and I’m ready to reenter the blogosphere.

More here soon…

Road trippin’

Friday, June 3, 2011

I’m out of the office on a road trip until mid- to late afternoon today (Friday). I should have a fresh post up by 5 p.m. or so. Please check back. Thanks!

Critters taste good in St. Patrick’s Day stew

Thursday, March 17, 2011

I haven’t posted much lately because of March Madness.

The past three weeks have been Basketball Tournament Time here in the Mountain State. So far I’ve covered games in the state small-college conference tournament, the girls’ state’ high-school tournament and the boys’ state high-school tournament. I do it because the Gazette’s sports staff gets stretched mighty thin in early March. The editors ask me to help out, and I do.

What does basketball have to do with critters, stew and St. Patrick’s Day? Nothing, really. But I felt you were owed an explanation. Now on to the topic at hand:

Back during the summer, I did a story on a Huntington woman’s recipe for Goose a l’Orange. To get the necessary photographs, I visited Regina, Todd and Kristin Trimboli’s house on an evening Regina had chosen to prepare the dish. During dinner (you didn’t think I’d turn down a free meal, did you?), Todd mentioned that Regina also liked to prepare Irish Stew with game meat as the chief component. He said it had become a family tradition to serve it on St. Patrick’s Day, and he and Regina invited me to stop by the following March for a sample.

That was today. I just polished off a hearty sample made with venison, rabbit and squirrel. As expected, it was delicious!

Regina gave me permission to share the recipe with you. Here it is:

Irish Stew

Ingredients: 1 1/2 lbs. venison, 1 rabbit, 2 squirrels, 3 cups beef broth, 2 tbsp. all-purpose flour, 1 1/2 tbsp. vegetable oil, 2 cloves minced garlic, 1 tsp. ground thyme, 1 tsp. salt, 1/4 tsp. pepper, 1 bottle Harp beer, 5 cubed potatoes, 6 carrots sliced into discs, and 3/4 of an onion diced or minced.

Instructions: Boil the rabbit and squirrel separately until tender and cut into pieces. Cut the venison into bite-sized pieces and brown in oil. Add 1 cup of beef broth to the venison, bring to a boil and simmer 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the cooked rabbit and squirrel and simmer 10 more minutes. Add the garlic, thyme, salt and pepper. Add the bottle of beer and bring to a boil. Add the onion and simmer for 5 minutes. Add the potatoes, the carrots and 1 more cup of beef broth. Bring to a boil, cover and simmer, stirring occasionally for 30 to 40 minutes (vegetables should be tender, not soft). Combine 1/2 cup of beef broth with 2 tbsp. of all-purpose flour and add to the stew until the stew thickens. If the stew is too thick, more beef broth can be added.

Enjoy!

Happy New Year — and thank you!

Friday, December 31, 2010

The year 2010 was good — no, make that great — to the Woods & Waters Blog.

Thanks to you fine folks, we had three times as many visitors as we did in 2009. And we had 36 times as many visitors as we did in 2008. I’m deeply grateful, and will do my best to keep the posts as relevant and interesting as possible.

Again, my most sincere thanks.

And Happy New Year! May you all prosper in 2011.

Apologies for the past couple of days

Thursday, December 23, 2010

I’ve spent the last 36 hours or so undergoing and recuperating from a minor medical procedure. I’m back in the saddle now and should have a new hunting-, fishing-, or wildlife-related post up soon.

Thank you, readers!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Just a quick note to say a giant THANK YOU for visiting this site. The number of visitors has taken a sharp rise lately, and this blog has passed “hit” milestones we didn’t realize we could reach.

We at the Gazette — and I personally — thank you for your continued readership.