Even here in Hunting/Fishing Paradise there are days where nothing happens. I went out in my skiff 4 days ago and tried everything but didn't get a bite. Then a friend invited me out in his cabin cruiser and we trolled 5 lines and tried every lure and every speed and didn't get a bite. Then Friday a friend and I went up to Mauna Kea and hunted hard at 8500 feet for Mouflon sheep. I saw a ewe and two lambs the size of rabbits but that was it. Nada. Then last night I went up to the coffee tree estate and didn't see a pig and didn't hear a pig and didn't smell a pig. Pig sign everywhere but no pigs in the flesh.
The guy who owns the other place where I hunt pigs with my bow just sent me a generous gift certificate card to COSTCO and a thank you note for ridding his property of pigs. [What a great guy I am. Unlimited hunting on some beautiful property and he thanks me?] He also extended his invitation to come up at any time to hunt because he knows and I know and all of you reading this know the pigs will be back and they will be back soon. Life is tough.
Hawaii's ecosystem is so out of whack because of invasive animals and plants and intentional animal/plant introductions that have gone awry that any predator that arrives here [including me] has a field day. Such has recently become the case. An area that offers very good feral sheep [not Mouflon] hunting and good goat hunting and very good pig hunting will not have a hunting season for adults this year. Why? The sheep populations have plummeted because packs of wild dogs are roaming at will and killing the little ones, even the little pigs. These dogs often sleep at the foot of their masters' beds at night and are not sleeping out under the stars. Their owners are deadbeats who let the dogs come and go at their pleasure and these dogs team up during the day and do what wild dogs in packs will do, which is kill. The Fish and Wildlife people had to cancel the hunt and have informed a few of us that they will now do what is necessary to eliminate the threat. You can figure that statement out. I'm not blaming the dogs but I am blaming the owners. I've never shot a dog because I'm a dog lover and I'm not sure I could now, but beautiful bird dogs and lean, muscular pig hunting dogs and purebred dogs with prize pedigrees are running around killing everything [including wild turkeys] they can catch and it's out of control.
I met a Fish and Wildlife worker up on Mauna Kea on our sheep hunt who told us that feral cats are an enormous problem, even up on the dry, lava-crusted windswept slopes above 8000 feet. They kill a huge number of gamebirds because gamebirds nest on the ground within reach of the cats. We now see live traps with cans of cat food for bait next to all the bird guzzlers. I've seen as many as 50 feral cats along 3 miles of road after dark. Can you imagine what a million bobcats would do to the gamebird population in California? Spaying and neutering and controlling your animals don't seem to be at all popular over here and the effects are being seen. I wouldn't be at all surprised if there is a feral cat season that opens soon. That sounds really weird but a cat that kills a gamebird a day to survive multiplied by thousands of cats times 365 days a year adds up to no more gamebirds.
Uncle Ji and Ev Bouret:
Are feral dogs and feral cats a problem on your islands? How about the mongoose [mongeese?]? There are mongooses/mongeese everywhere here, in fact, I see 3 or 4 everytime I hunt pigs in the residential areas. For those on the mainland, mongeese were introduced to kill the rats that sneaked over on fruit boats and were eating fruits and other crops here in Hawaii. Unfortunately, the mongeese/mongoose/mongooses preferred to eat the native birds and could care less about the rats. Now the rats and mongooses are buddies and are both getting fat.
Still, with all the challenges, the hunting here is great. I wonder, though [and Ev's and Uncle Ji's input would be welcome here], if the hunting tradition Hawaii will remain strong as more and more mainlanders move to this part of the universe. Even among the native Hawaiians, the young people seem to have little interest in hunting and fishing, preferring instead the same things that mainlander youth enjoy. Uncle Ji and Ev: Do you catch any crap because you are hunters and is there any anti-hunting sentiment growing on your islands?
Now if someone out there has an idea for getting the skunk off my back, please let me know.
Aloha for now.
The guy who owns the other place where I hunt pigs with my bow just sent me a generous gift certificate card to COSTCO and a thank you note for ridding his property of pigs. [What a great guy I am. Unlimited hunting on some beautiful property and he thanks me?] He also extended his invitation to come up at any time to hunt because he knows and I know and all of you reading this know the pigs will be back and they will be back soon. Life is tough.
Hawaii's ecosystem is so out of whack because of invasive animals and plants and intentional animal/plant introductions that have gone awry that any predator that arrives here [including me] has a field day. Such has recently become the case. An area that offers very good feral sheep [not Mouflon] hunting and good goat hunting and very good pig hunting will not have a hunting season for adults this year. Why? The sheep populations have plummeted because packs of wild dogs are roaming at will and killing the little ones, even the little pigs. These dogs often sleep at the foot of their masters' beds at night and are not sleeping out under the stars. Their owners are deadbeats who let the dogs come and go at their pleasure and these dogs team up during the day and do what wild dogs in packs will do, which is kill. The Fish and Wildlife people had to cancel the hunt and have informed a few of us that they will now do what is necessary to eliminate the threat. You can figure that statement out. I'm not blaming the dogs but I am blaming the owners. I've never shot a dog because I'm a dog lover and I'm not sure I could now, but beautiful bird dogs and lean, muscular pig hunting dogs and purebred dogs with prize pedigrees are running around killing everything [including wild turkeys] they can catch and it's out of control.
I met a Fish and Wildlife worker up on Mauna Kea on our sheep hunt who told us that feral cats are an enormous problem, even up on the dry, lava-crusted windswept slopes above 8000 feet. They kill a huge number of gamebirds because gamebirds nest on the ground within reach of the cats. We now see live traps with cans of cat food for bait next to all the bird guzzlers. I've seen as many as 50 feral cats along 3 miles of road after dark. Can you imagine what a million bobcats would do to the gamebird population in California? Spaying and neutering and controlling your animals don't seem to be at all popular over here and the effects are being seen. I wouldn't be at all surprised if there is a feral cat season that opens soon. That sounds really weird but a cat that kills a gamebird a day to survive multiplied by thousands of cats times 365 days a year adds up to no more gamebirds.
Uncle Ji and Ev Bouret:
Are feral dogs and feral cats a problem on your islands? How about the mongoose [mongeese?]? There are mongooses/mongeese everywhere here, in fact, I see 3 or 4 everytime I hunt pigs in the residential areas. For those on the mainland, mongeese were introduced to kill the rats that sneaked over on fruit boats and were eating fruits and other crops here in Hawaii. Unfortunately, the mongeese/mongoose/mongooses preferred to eat the native birds and could care less about the rats. Now the rats and mongooses are buddies and are both getting fat.
Still, with all the challenges, the hunting here is great. I wonder, though [and Ev's and Uncle Ji's input would be welcome here], if the hunting tradition Hawaii will remain strong as more and more mainlanders move to this part of the universe. Even among the native Hawaiians, the young people seem to have little interest in hunting and fishing, preferring instead the same things that mainlander youth enjoy. Uncle Ji and Ev: Do you catch any crap because you are hunters and is there any anti-hunting sentiment growing on your islands?
Now if someone out there has an idea for getting the skunk off my back, please let me know.
Aloha for now.