Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Birds & Bees

Spring has taken off like a rocket!  Turkey season was really weird...first, Kansas reduced hunters to just one spring turkey tag instead of two and then to lessen the spread of the Rona, out-of-state tags were eliminated.  None of the weirdness kept us from laying the hammer down!!



Things have been really busy at the farm, the new and improved garden has been planted, complete with new drip irrigation system.  The bee keeping operation has really expanded.  Earlier in the spring we caught two swarms of bees and did some hive splits.  Putting a swarm of bees into a hive is one of the coolest things to witness in nature.  You basically shake the swarm of bees out onto a bed sheet and they quickly organize and proceed to march directly into the hive.  Click on the picture below to watch the video!   

 
In just a few weeks we will be planting the first round of pumpkins in the new and improved patch.  This year the patch will be almost an acre!

It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown is a Christmas special ...




Thursday, July 25, 2019

You Want Cheese On That?






Filling the entire Narrows with the heavenly aroma of lightly charred grain fed beef is the marriage of my two favorite things...fishing and eating!  The Pike were a bit slow during the day, but the walleye got hot in a hurry along with the cheeseburgers!  BOOM!!!  Get some suckers!!!!  
"What's the use of life if you don't live it?"
                                                              ~Lee Brice  


Thursday, June 27, 2019

It's Harvest Time

The rain finally stopped long enough to unload the animals from the ark and roll out the combines.  One report said it has rained 43% of the days since May 1st, its rained so much the gauges now measure in fathoms rather than inches.

The summer harvest is always a busy time which makes for hard work and long days.  Farming is the only job I know where you spend a dollar to make a quarter, the way this wheat harvest is going will prove no exception.


Finn loves spending time on the farm, he represents the 5th generation getting their hands dirty on this land.



Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Long Beards and Belt Buckles

My good friend Maverick Engelhart of Maverick Design produced this poster for the Hunt.  

Man do I love turkey hunting in Wyoming!  The landscape is just how I image the old west looked in 1876 when General Custer and the 7th Calvary marched through this place headed west to meet their fate at the Battle of Little Bighorn.  The abundance of wildlife is amazing....deer, antelope, elk and turkeys are around every corner.  Not to mention the host community of Hulett knows how to throw a party, after all they have been doing it for a while, this was the 10th Annual Old West Invitational Turkey Shoot.  Each spring, the Old West Invitational Turkey Shoot (OWITS) is held in Hulett, WY, with Devils Tower National Monument as the backdrop. The event is a cooperative effort with a two-pronged goal; raise funds for two great non-profits and promote wildlife conservation in Wyoming.






We were paired with two hunters for the hunt:  Paul Bennick is an Army veteran from Buffalo, WY and Ryan Bronson is the Director of Conservation and Policy for Vista Outdoor.  Both Paul and Ryan are accomplished hunters (which makes guiding so much easier).  Ryan nailed it when he described turkey hunting as, "a series of 50/50 events", he explained his theory this way, "50% of the time the setup is right and the bird goes this way and not that way, but the other 50% of the time, nothing goes right and the bird gives you the slip".  This hunt proved his theory as the early morning setups were nothing more than a front row seat to a symphony of gobbling and a good nap followed by frustration when the toms would fly down from the roost and follow hens off in the opposite direction of our setup.  However, on back to back days we were able to call birds up out of the same draw allowing both Paul and Ryan to tag out.   CLICK HERE TO WATCH VIDEO



Low and behold Paul's bird scored well enough to get him a belt buckle placing 3rd overall in the Hunt.  Buckles are awarded to the top three teams with the biggest bird (hunter, guide and landowner get buckles for each place).  Ben collected the 3rd Place Guide buckle! 





Tuesday, April 30, 2019

King of the Spring

No better way to get the juices flowing in the early morning before championship baseball!


Scored the come from behind game tying run and the go ahead run in the same inning!

Friday, November 16, 2018

Double Down

The Kansas Rut did not disappoint this year.  Activity in the woods really started to pick-up around November 5th and was absolutely crazy by the 10th & 11th.  The full moon in late October may have played a part in some boring evenings in the tree, but true to form, my favorite three day stretch of November 9-10-11 produced in a big way. 

 
I was thrilled to get a text from my boy informing me he had shot a buck.  I hated to steal his thunder, so I didn't tell him I had also shot a buck.  It wasn't until we had loaded his deer and were driving out of the field and he noticed we weren't on the road out and asked where we were going that I told him we needed to go load my buck. 

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Casting North of the Border

Fishing in Canada is an incredible experience, one which should be your list of "things to do".  This year marked my 12th fishing trip to the providence of Manitoba which is home to Viking Lodge.  The drive is 1,400 miles straight north and takes less than 24 hours.  So many people tell me they are afraid of the drive, I explain it like this...you leave home in the morning and the next morning you are in a different world!  On the trip we target three main species of fish: northern pike, walleye and lake trout.  Recently, we have started fishing a different lake for monster rainbow and brook trout.

Viking Lodge is located in the Grassy River Provincial Park and sits on the First Cranberry Lake.  The area literally has hundreds of miles of fish-able water.


The typical day involves sleeping in until 9am, waking and eating a freshly baked cinnamon roll from the Lodge with a goal of hitting the water by 10am.  Early day fishing finds us targeting lake trout in deep water (40-50') or casting grass beds for northern pike.  Mid-day we pick up a few walleye on rocky points and have a shore lunch.  As evening comes we fish for walleye on points until sunset which occurs around 11pm, then we head back to the Lodge for some sleep.  When the day ends you realize your arm is sore because you have caught a lot of fish.

We don't beat ourselves up fishing for one species, if one is not biting another typically is on the bite.  If you need a change of scenery, there are portage lakes where you can park one boat and walk across land to another boat and fish an entirely different lake.  Ten days of fishing goes by in a flash!!