Dave Richey OUTDOORS

Dave Richey is about Hunting and Fishing
  • About Dave
  • Welcome to Dave Richey Outdoors
Twitter Facebook RSS

Dave’s Outdoor Calendar

May 2012
S M T W T F S
« Apr    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Interviews w/ Dave

Jack O'Malley Interview w/ Dave Richey

Contact Dave

  • eMail Dave
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Loading

Categories

Dave’s Tracks

Dave’s Links

  • Dan Small Outdoors
  • O'fieldstream Journals

Dave Online

Scoop's.Books

DRO.Outdoors:WP.com

Dave.Richey.Outdoors:WP.com

Dave.Richey.Outdoors:Posterous.com

Dave.Richey.Outdoors:Main

Dave.Richey.Outdoors:Twitter

Dave.Richey.Outdoors:Facebook

Jul16

Remembering George …

by admin on July 16th, 2010 at 6:11 PM
Posted In: The Daily


Thinking of George is always a pleasure. We shared so much as twins, and our mutual love of fishing and my thoughts of him, keeps his memory alive and fresh in my mind. Some favorite memories include:

*A day many years ago when we were fishing the Sturgeon River. I hooked a nice steelhead, and followed the fish downstream to the upstream lip of a deep hole. I tip-toed out as far as I could, and battled that fish to a standstill.

There I went, downstream in the heavy current, as George raced ahead to catch me.

Suddenly I could feel the sand washing out around my wader-clad feet, and knew I was going for a swim. I tried to back up but the current was too strong, and there I went, trying to swim with my rod hand. I hollered at George as I washed through the hole, telling him to grab me at the next shallow riffle.

He ran ahead while I foundered, and I hit the shallow gravel upside-down, and he grabbed my wader straps and hauled me upright. I was thoroughly soaked on a very cold day, and five minutes later I landed the fish and headed for the car for dry clothes and a warm towel. If any one cares, the steelhead weighed 5 1/2 pounds.

*Another time he was wading a soft place on the Platte River. I'd warned against it because of the soft marl bottom, but he got out and into the current, and then both feet got stuck. He was in waist-deep water, and if he fell over, he'd drown because the current would hold him under.

I dropped my rod, grabbed a long and limber tag alder limb, and waded out toward him. He wasn't panicking, but knew the consequences if he lost his footing. I was right on the edge of firm footing and soft, and still 10 feet from him. My branch was about nine feet long. I knew I could stretch out two more feet, and his arms would reach two feet without having to move his body, but I wanted him to get a firm grip.

One good turn deserves another as I pulled George from boot-sucking mud.

"All I can do is pull," I told him. "No sense in both of us being stuck in midstream. Grab hold tight, and I'll push slightly, and hopefully it will give you enough leverage so you can keep your balance while pulling one foot clear of the muck. Take off your wader belt and shoulder straps, because if you lose your balance I'll try to pull you out of your waders."

He got a death grip on the limb, as did I, and I pushed slightly to help him maintain his balance. He worked feverishly on the foot closest to me, and got it free and took a two-foot step. That foot went a foot down in the muck but landed on a submerged limb. He worked on freeing the other foot, and even though it took a half-hour, we got him up onto firm footing and to safety.

*One night we were fishing Manistee Lake at Manistee in August for big walleyes. Back then some big freighters would move up the lake, and throw a huge wake. I hooked a big walleye, and got it close to the boat, and this was bigger than any of the 12 and 13-pounders we had landed.

"He's huge," George said in an understatement. "I'll put the flashlight in my mouth, and try to net him." He did, and just as the net went under the fish, the wake from a passing freighter hit us. The lure hooks tangled in the net, and the fish lay delicately balanced across the net.

We missed a huge walleye of 15-16 pounds on Manistee Lake.

He did the only thing he could, and tried to keep the walleye balanced on the net frame. He got the net and fish over the gunwale before the walleye flipped once, tore the hooks free, bounced once off the gunwale, and I grabbed for the fish. It slid through my hands like a greased pig, and got away. We estimated his weight at 15-16 pounds.

*George loved fly fishing and tying flies, and I remember one of the last brown trout he caught was with the late  Frank Love of Frederic. They were fishing the upper Manistee River near the 612 bridge from Frank's riverboat, and George hooked the fish just after dark.

It jumped and splashed, and George was making the woods ring with his whoops and hollers. He fought that fish well, giving line when needed and taking line when he could, and several minutes later George landed a 22-inch brown.

He admired it briefly, leaned over the edge of the longboat, held the noble brown trout into the current until it pulled away and swam back to his home under a log jam.

That was George Richey. He loved life, loved trout fishing, detested crowds of people, and thought kindly of many people. He loved trout and trout fishing enough to release the larger fish, and many people should emulate his actions. He fished for fun, not for food, and that makes me miss him even more.

Posted via email from Dave Richey Outdoors

Share This Post
2 Comments
Jul15

Bow-shooting bucks is easy

by admin on July 15th, 2010 at 10:50 AM
Posted In: The Daily


It stops, rubs a tree with its antlers, then stands back to admire his handiwork, and then hits another lick on the bark, checks it out, and then continues toward you. He stops, and can't smell you or any nearby danger, but he is in no hurry.

The anxiety level builds after the third or fourth stop for the deer to putter around doing big-buck things, and then he moves forward again. He’s now 50 yards away, and will soon have a date with destiny. Your breath is labored and ragged, and you are feeling a bit light headed.

Preparing for a bow shot.

His antlers are big, possibly the largest whitetail buck you've ever seen in the wild. He stands, just out of bow range, and surveys the area. He doesn't smell or see any danger, but he didn't grow a rack with 10 good long points and a 20-inch inside spread by being stupid.

He stands, motionless for a few minutes, head up and looking around. He's not spooky, but is just being careful.

Satisfied, he moves to within 40 yards. The rack seems to grow even larger the closer he comes. The hunter is sucking air by now, and begging silently for a 20-yard broadside or quartering-away shot. The thought of shooting this big buck makes you dizzy with excitement, and your heart is racing and you feel weak.

A full load of adrenaline is streaming through your system, and the buck moves slowly to within 35 yards and then to 30, where he stands behind a thin screen of brush. Jolt after jolt of adrenaline has you as wired as scoffing down 10 cans of a high-energy drink.

Don’t try to rush things. Be patient.

He offers a brief 25-yard shot but your eyes riveted riveted on the rack, and you don't want to make a mistake. He's coming, just let him move into the 20-yard range and then wait for a good shot at this huge buck.

Finally, he steps within your ideal range, turns to offer a quartering-away shot at 20 yards. The buck stares off toward other deer 100 yards away in the field, and you raise your bow, stare at the antlers again, come to full draw, aim and turn loose what you feel is a well-aimed arrow.

There is a loud twhack, and the buck races off while the arrow and broadhead sail off into the brush. Excited, feeling you made a killing shot, you climb down and follow the Game Tracker string to the arrow. There isn't a drop of blood on the arrow. What happened?

Tunnel vision had set in and when the hunter aimed and shot, he aimed at the major focal point of interest on that buck — the antlers. He forgot to force himself to pick a spot low behind the front shoulder. His continuous focus on the buck and his majestic rack was his undoing. He got caught up in the moment, and forgot what he was supposed to do.

Concentrate on where to shoot. Forget about the antlers.

Total concentration is paramount during the aiming process. Once I know a buck has antlers, and decide to shoot him, I never look at the headgear again. I focus hard on the heart-lung area, pick a spot, shoot and the deer dies.

A buddy went on a Tennessee wild boar hunting with me many years ago, and I warned him against staring at the length of the boar's tushes. These big curved teeth are fascinating and very sharp, and my friend looked at the teeth, aimed and hit the boar in the top of the head. It wasn't an immediate killing shot, and I hollered to "shoot for the heart-lung area." He quickly recovered, shot again and the boar died a quick death.

Tunnel vision doesn't just happen to police officers in a fire-fight with the bad guys. It happens to hunters all the time, and most often to sportsmen with very little hunting experience but high expectations.

It can ruin a hunt, but there is no need for that to happen. The trick is to determine whether it has antlers, and if it is what you want. Once that has been determined, forget about it, and intently focus on the vital area. Don’t even look at the antlers again. Forget about them. Pick a spot behind the front shoulder and concentrate on it.

Once you draw back an arrow, and aim, never look at the buck’s head again. Pick a tiny spot behind the front shoulder, concentrate on that spot, make a smooth release, and do not drop your bow hand until the arrow makes contact with the deer.

Big bucks come often to those television hunters, but for most people like you and me, it can be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. The timing is too important to waste by missing an easy shot. Deep concentration, and not tunnel vision, is the key to bow-hunting success.

Posted via email from Dave Richey Outdoors

Share This Post
 Comment 
Jul14

Give our food plots a drink

by admin on July 14th, 2010 at 5:45 PM
Posted In: The Daily


Crops were impossible to grow for a few years, and dust storms covered roads, seeped into houses, and some people with respiratory problems did not survive those years.

Things aren't that bad right now. It's not even close but people who have put in food plots or are trying to establish them are having a tough way to to go to make things grow.

Clover, like shown above, is nutritional for deer.

Last year was a bad year for me with Purple-Top turnips," said a friend. "I planted after a  nice rain, but then the rains ended and the turnips weren't any good. They came up small and rather woody looking on the inside.

Anyone who plants a food plot is subject to all of the same problems as any farmer. Some years the weather turns against us.  Many people are getting ready to put in their fall crops, but the soil is hard, cracking, and lacks any moisture. A series of rains are needed, and we usually get some rain in August to jump-start our fall planting season."

One can only hope the weatherman cooperates. If not, some fields will be useless.

Two fields of mine will be ready to plant in early to late August, and we are hoping for a good rain between now and August 1, and some good rain storms after. That's what makes fall planting so tricky, and admittedly, this will be my third such planting. Two produced a lush crop and one could barely grow weeds.

Getting ready for fall food plots.

Many people like fall plantings or annual crops while others like some favorites when the soil conditions are conducive to growing a  crop of brassica such as Dwarf Essex Rape and Purple-Top turnips. Poor soil conditions can be built into good organic soil by planting buckwheat, oats and rye, and discing it into the ground for two or three years in a row.

"This is called 'green manure,'" an elderly farmer told me. "Two or three seasons of a green manure crop will usually build enough organic residue into your soil to produce a good high-protein crop such as alfalfa, clover or rape.

He did caution me to keep records of what is being planted every year. Keeping records of planting dates, crops planted, and what kind of a yield it produces is very important. He says a lack of records means that sportsmen have no way of knowing what they did right or did wrong.

He said the ideal plan is to provide for a year 'round food source for animals and birds. Proper planning means soil tests before anything is planted. Some soil is so poor that nothing but weeds will grow until the soil mineral content is built up.

Rain, and a good bit of it, is needed soon.

One should never consider a food plot as a replacement for baiting. One problem with food plots on large tracts of land is the land is heavily wooded in many cases, and it takes time to build a good soil content that is capable of growing high-protein crops. It just doesn't happen overnight.

Many  food plots that are planted to legumes (beans and peas) are literally destroyed by deer eating the crop as it begins to grow. A small food plot will be quickly annihilated by hungry deer.

One suggestion for sportsman is to mix other things that will grow in the fall and come back early in the spring. A mix of winter wheat offers good green food and cover in the fall, and it comes back up as soon as the snow melts. Rape and Purple-Top turnips, with some alfalfa and clover in other nearby fields, will produce good fall and early spring food for hungry deer.

If you see a man with a white beard standing outside about this time of year, and gazing skyward, it  probably means I'm either praying or scanning the skies for sign of rain clouds.

A bit of each may be needed late this summer and in the early fall. I know that my food plots are in bad need of a good drink, and the sooner it comes the better.

Posted via email from Dave Richey Outdoors

Share This Post
 Comment 
  • Page 159 of 276
  • « First
  • «
  • 157
  • 158
  • 159
  • 160
  • 161
  • »
  • Last »

Quote Rotator

"Then we could see it before we could hear it, a cloud of earth and sticks and stones - it was war, a bombardment - then nothing but the pulsing surge of the water racing past us. And all the while my father and old Dan and the rest of us stood there, silently watching the fishless waters of Lake Traver emptying into the lumber company's ruined beaver dam. The beaver dam had washed out." - Little Panama
John Voelker, Trout Madness
"Some anglers I know can't quite decide just what kind of green pastures are the most wearing on fishermen: those in the great majority that turn into wild-goose chases; those rarer ones that sometimes actually deliver; or those rarest ones of all, like Loon Lake, that are simply crawling with magazine-cover trout, and steadily defy one's best efforts to take them on flies." - Green Pastures
John Voelker, Trout Madness
"Yantleman of da yruy," he said, rising and pointing scornfully at the fish net. "Who da hecks ever caught a gude Svede using vun of dem gol-dang homemade Finlander nets? Ay tank you!" - Paulson, Paulson, Everywhere
John Voelker, Trout Madness
"She was born on an assembly line in Detroit in 1928." -The Fish Car
John Voelker, Trout Madness
I lurched foggily across the street and banged on the bar, "Drinks fer da house!" I ordered, suddenly going native. "Giff all da Paulsons in da place vatever dey vant." - Paulson, Paulson, Everywhere
John Voelker, Trout Madness

Scoop’s Books: Flickr Catalog

CONTACT Dave
for Pricing & Availability.
FULL FLICKR CATALOG

[AFG_gallery id='13311534@N04']
CONTACT Dave
for Pricing & Availability.
FULL FLICKR CATALOG

PromoLinks

Online Marketing
Add blog to our directory.

©2007-2012 Dave Richey | Powered by WordPress with Easel | Subscribe: RSS | Back to Top ↑