The above title asks a good question, and it's been tossed my way for nearly six years by many readers. My answer is invariably the same: why not?



Anglers and hunters can understand a column, which is nothing more than a bit of self-indulgence plus some solid fishing or hunting experiences and information. Columns are about what I think, feel, do, believe in, rant against, etc.

The same can be said about a blog.

 A blog (short for weblog) is a daily journal of sorts. It covers the wide range of my daily emotions, and how I look at things through a bleary and somewhat jaundiced eye. You may sense a touch of anger, animosity, joy, sorrow or other human emotions. My feelings on a wide variety of things is never far from the surface nor am I adversed to speaking my mind.



The author with a 12-pound Quebec Arctic char.

You'll almost always feel my love for the environment, the animals, birds and fish that we hunt or try to catch, and you'll feel my sense of betrayal and delusion when some sorry dude levels perfectly wonderful wildlife habitat and then builds a shopping mall or hard-scrabble subdivision on it.

 Such things tick me off, and I rant against them.

Readers will read my unabashed feelings on brook trout that invariably turn me on in their watery little trickles, and the litter that invariably turns me off when I must look at it. You'll note, hopefully with a righteous sense of indignation like mine, when I bare my soul about the destruction of an ever-decreasing amount of wild land.



Hopefully, you'll share my glee when the DNR does something really great or get a bit owly when they continue to do something utterly stupid like depriving you and me of the opportunity to obtain private-land turkey permits in Region II while granting such permits to people in the Upper Peninsula and southern Lower Peninsula.



My weblog runs daily, and I've only missed a few days since November, 2003, and then only because some piece of crud hacked my website. My archives are available to one and all, and I urge readers to dust off some of them and see what you've been missing.

You'll share my pain when my beloved twin brother George died on Sept. 10, 2003. You'll get as excited as I did when catching a 30-pound muskie, writing about the Christmas Tree Bomber, and other true tales.

I invite you to walk with me when we go into a bear swamp for a hunt, and what is even more fun, when we walk out in the darkness.

Jump into my tree stand as we bow-hunt for whitetails, and whisper in my ear when it's time to shoot a dandy buck or tell me to draw down on him and let up, giving him a life he could have lost had I shot.



Come along as we wade belly-deep into an area steelhead stream during those cold March days, and grab the net when we slug it out with hefty chinook salmon in the fall. Let's take a walleye fishing trip on Long or Platte lakes, a bluegill outing to Arbutus Lake, and we can trudge through the January snow in search of cottontails or ever-increasingly rare snowshoe hares.



Do you feel up to laying flat on the ground as Canada geese hover overhead, honking loudly, as our belly muscles tighten and we lever our way up to a sitting and shooting position? Is there anyone out there who doesn't thrill to the loud and clattering flush of a ruffed grouse as the October dew dries on the ready-to-fall golden leaves?

Does any upland gunner fail to rejoice to the towering flight of woodcock as they dart and twist ever upward out of the alders before quickly plummeting back to earth before we can swing and shoot?

 It will be a good time, trust me.

Calling predators with that high-pitched squeal of a dying rabbit is a heap of fun during the winter months as the 'yote darts out of a thicket, and begins circling to a downwind location. We know a shot may be possible but it's nerve wracking to watch the animal close in on a spot straight downwind. Will we get a shot or not? Read on and learn what happened.



Fishing and hunting has been a major part of my life for 60 of my 70 years, and I eagerly await each new season and every new adventure. You ask me: why do you write a daily weblog?

The late Alaskan guide Jake Gaudet (left) and I moose hunting.

Truth be told, 

I write because I have a strong need within me to do so. There is a deep driving urge to write, and a need to share my love of fishing and hunting with my readers. I don't have to write for the money although I wish this blog and website paid more; instead, writing about the outdoors makes me feel good, makes me feel whole and helps smooth out all the rough spots in my life.

You and me, we can go places and do things. We can discover new places to fish or hunt, and learn more about what pulls us ever onward to another wonderful outdoor recreational adventure. People who stay indoors, and watch idiotic game shows on television have my sincere sympathy.



Me, I'd rather be outdoors with a bow, rifle, shotgun or rod in my hand and enjoying nature. How about you?

NOTE: Don't forget to check out my Scoop's Books and my Book Reviews. These sites can be accessed from my Home Page. Take care of each other, and mentor someone about fishing and hunting. If you like what you read on this website, don't forget to tell your family, friends, neighbors and relative. My site is free, and there is a boatload of great outdoor reading dating back several years. Check it out, and thanks for tuning in.

Posted via email from Dave Richey Outdoors

Share This Post