West Virginia State Chapter NWTF Home Page
Transcription
West Virginia State Chapter NWTF Home Page
2014 Winter Edition West Virginia A Publication of the WV State Chapter of the NWTF Message From The President Conserve. Hunt. Share. Words to live by! I can’t believe that 2013 is quickly coming to its end. I hope that it has been, and will continue to be, a good year for you all. The 40 year anniversary of the National Wild Turkey Federation will soon be behind us, but not the task that we have started and challenges that lie ahead. I want to thank the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources for all that they do! I want to welcome all of our new members that we have. You have joined a great organization that continues to work for the wildlife and sportsmen of this country. I can tell you that being a member of the National Wild Turkey Federation means that you do make a difference. We (you and The National Wild Turkey Federation) are planning and working for a better future for wildlife, and sportsmen. We are implementing the plan for our future and calling it Save the Habitat, Save the Hunt. Our goal is to “save the habitat” and conserve 4 million acres of habitat. Our NWTF Biologist “Culley” McCurdy has and will continue to do this with our help as well as the help of the WVDNR. We will also work to “save the hunt” and create 1.5 million new hunters. Some examples of this that all of our chapters can do is to take advantage of the Jakes Take Aim Trailer and use it to introduce youth (and their parents) to the shooting sports. Another good thing is to take a youth, or even an adult, hunting that has never gone before. Many people that have never had the chance to shoot a gun or to hunt would love it “IF” someone would just spend a little time with them showing them how it is done. Be that person at least once a year. Trust me, you will not miss a day of hunting. Instead you will gain a lifelong memory. The Save the Habitat Save the Hunt initiative is setting Scott Wilson, WV NWTF President high but very doable goals for our organization. Please help to make these goals a reality! It will take a team effort but good things seldom come by chance! On a negative note, On August 9th several members and I attended a meeting to discuss the negative impact of the Birthplace of Rivers National Monument, should it become a reality. The loss of land management and outdoor recreation is not a direction we want to go. On a more positive note, the Jakes Take Aim Trailer is being used and enjoyed throughout the state. We recently used the Jakes take Aim Trailer at National Hunting and Fishing Days held at Stonewall Lake. The trailer was a great success. A total of 559 youth went through the trailer and shot the guns. We had 387 boys, 172 girls! For a lot of the shooters it was the first time that they ever shot a gun. The children really enjoyed shooting the guns and then being able to keep their targets. I think that all of the volunteers had a good time too! At least I truly hope they did! In addition we signed up 269 new J.A.K.E. members! Have you ever wonder just how hard our Regional Director ”Farky” (Bob Farkasovsky) and our State NWTF Biologist “Culley” (Patrick McCurdy) actually work? Hard enough to make us proud. They were recently honored by The National Wild Turkey Federation as the Best Conservation Field Team! (See photo in this edition) I want to thank both Farky and Culley (and you) for all the hard work they do. I am sure you agree we are lucky to have them! Scott Wilson In this issue 4 5 7 8 9 10 13 14 WV State 2014 Awards Banquet Registration 16 What a Bunch of Jakes Local Chapter Happenings The Good Ole Days Logan Area Chapter Keeps it Moving The Grandest of Slams West Virginia WILD 17 Local Chapter Presidents 18 The Saga of IH357 19 2014 West Virginia Hunting Heritage Banquet Schedule The Art of Turkey Hunting Save the Habitat. Save the Hunt. National Wild Turkey Federation Mission Statement: Dedicated to the conservation of the wild turkey and preservation of our hunting heritage. wvstatechapternwtf.com 2 Flock Talk Winter 2014 w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m West Virginia Winter 2014 Issue FLOCK lk Ta Editor/Chairman Roger Wolfe wolfeii@hotmail.com Art Director/Layout Tina Ward Copyright 2014 The West Virginia Chapter of the National Wild Turkey Federation West Virginia Flock Talk is published annually by the West Virginia Chapter of the National Wild Turkey Federation (WV-NWTF). Information in this publication is provided “as is” and without warranties of any kind, whether express or implied. The West Virginia Chapter of the NWTF makes no guarantees as to accuracy, currency, quality or fitness of any information presented in this publication. The WV-NWTF assumes no legal liability or responsibility for any incorrect, misleading, outdated or missing information. The views and opinions expressed in Flock Talk are those of the writers, who are responsible for the accuracy of content. They do not necessarily reflect the view of the WV-NWTF. The WV-NWTF reserves the right to cancel or reject articles or advertising deemed inappropriate or unsuitable for Flock Talk. Anyone using information from this publication does so at their own risk and shall be deemed to indemnify the WV-NWTF. The publisher shall not be responsible or liable for any damage or injury resulting from such use. W e s t V i r g i n i a s tat e NW TF Directory President Scott Wilson 304-624-4739 • Sp1wilson@aol.com Rt. 1 Box 442-A, Clarksburg, WV 26301 Regional Biologist Patrick "Cully" McCurdy 304-799-4792 • cmccurdy@nwtf.net HC82 Box 217B, Marlinton, WV 24954 Technical Committee Curtis Taylor 304-558-2771 • Curtis.i.taylor@wv.gov Building 74, 324 Fourth Ave., South Charleston, WV 25303 If your local Chapter has any events or happenings coming up, be sure to take lots of pictures and make lots of memories. Submit them for the 2015 Flock Talk to Roger Wolfe at wolfeii@hotmail.com. w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m Winter 2014 Flock Talk 3 TYGART Valley CHapter local chapter happenings TV Chapter Field Staff Awards 1st row: Margaret Brown, Edna Shockey, Trish Thomason, Diane Bargo & Joan Thomason. 2nd row: Neal Shockey, Bill Bargo, Walmart Meat Dept.Employees Greg Streets & Rob McCallister. Not pictured: Mike & Maxine Metzner, Don Thomason & Ray Mearns. Once again our local Tygart Valley Chapter of National Wild Turkey Federation participated in the Annual NWTF Turkeys Hunter Care Program during the 2012 Holiday Season, with the help of our local Walmart. This program was started to brighten up the holidays for those who might need extra help during the holiday season. The chapter donated 29 turkeys to local food pantries, homeless shelter, churches and individuals that will help provide Thanksgiving meals. Each chapter must raise their own money to participate in this program through fund raiser throughout the year. This program is an example of NWTF members proving that although the NWTF’S mission is to conserve the wild turkey and preserve our hunting heritage, but also helping others. Pictured Left to Right: George Thornton, CEO, Dr James Earl Kennamer, Chief Conservation Officer, Cully McCurdy, WV Regional Biologist, Phil Ferrare Jr, Director of Field Operations Northeast, Bob Farkasovsky, WV Regional Director, Shawn Dickey, District Field Supervisor, Brian Zielinski, Director of Conservation Operations Northeast. The NWTF West Virginia Field Staff Team, Bob Farkasovsky and Cully McCurdy won the Best Conservation/Field Operations Team Award for 2013, at the National Wild Turkey National Leadership Conference. WV NWTF members are lucky to have a hard working team like these guys pushing every day for the protection and enhancement of the wild turkey and it’s hunters in West Virginia. 4 Turkey Talk Summer Flock Talk Winter 20142011 During the Forest Festival as you were walking through the city park, you probably noticed the many vendors, food wagons and animals, like you do every year. But if you looked closely and if you didn’t notice, I’m sure you kids did, there was a new addition to the park, PICTURED ARE: An excited local youth waits for his just for children ages turn, with the help of Don Thomason and watching 17 and under. Tucked from outside Ray Mearns. between trees, this year the local Tygart Valley Chapter of NWTF, brought the WV State’s National Wild Turkey Federation JAKES Take Aim Air gun trailer to introduce youth in our area, the fun of shooting in a safe, fun environment. During the three days the trailer was visited by 551 both boys and girls who anxiety waited in line for their turn. NWTF chapters across North America hold JAKES Take Aim events to present the opportunity for youth ages 17 and under to try this free target shooting program. Each NWTF state chapter will receive a fully equipped air gun trailer to be used during JAKES DAY or other youth events. JAKES (Juniors Acquiring Knowledge, Ethics and Sportmanship) DAYS events are sponsored by local chapters that teach youth hunting and safety ethics, along with passing on the traditions of responsible hunting and teaching the principles of habitat management. This JAKES Take Aim event which is a physical activity also gets youth away from the TV and off the couch. Other benefits include building personal responsibility, improved hand and eye coordination, fine motor skills and concentration. The trailer will be returning for next year’s Forest Festival and was ran this year by TV Chapter members Bill Bargo, Ray Mearns, Don Thomason and Randall Watkins. This year during the West Virginia Forest Festival in Elkins as you were walking through the city park, you probably noticed the many vendors, food wagons and animals, like you do every year. But if you looked closely and if you didn’t notice, I’m sure your kids did, there was a new addition to the park, just for children ages 17 and under. Tucked between trees, this year the local Tygart Valley Chapter of NWTF, brought the WV State’s National Wild Turkey Federation JAKES Take Aim Air gun trailer to introduce youth in our area to the fun of shooting in a safe and fun environment. During the three days festival the trailer was visited by 551 boys and girls who anxiously waited in line for their turn to try out the Daisey air rifles. NWTF chapters across North America hold JAKES Take Aim events to introduce youths ages 17 and under to the shooting sports with this free target shooting program. Through a partnership with Midway USA each State Chapter will receive a fully equipped air gun trailer to be used during JAKES events or other youth events to expose not only the kids, but also the parents, to the fun and excitement of air gunning. The JAKES (Juniors Acquiring Knowledge, Ethics and Sportmanship) events are sponsored by local chapters that teach youth hunting and safety ethics, along with passing on the traditions of responsible hunting and teaching the principles of habitat and game management. This JAKES Take Aim air rifle range is a physical activity that also gets youth away from the TV and off the couch. Other benefits include building personal responsibility, improved hand and eye coordination, fine motor skills and concentration. The trailer will be returning for next year’s Forest Festival and was ran this year by Tygart Valley Chapter members Bill Bargo, Ray Mearns, Don Thomason and Randall Watkins. gt e r n w t f. c o m w vps a t antw e tcf.hoarp 13th Annual west virginia state Awards Banquet National Wild Turkey Federation DAYS HOTEL & CONVENTION CENTER FLATWOOD, WEST VIRGINIA SATURDAY – JANUARY 11, 2014 at 5:00 p.m. FIRST CHANCE for Chapters to see the new 2014 live auction package and silent auction package. Awards for Outstanding Chapter Performance during 2013, plus Chapter President of the Year, Volunteer of the Year, Wildlife Manager & Conservation Officer of the Year awards. Come Out For All The Fun! T H I S I S A LWAY S A S P E C I A L N I G H T. $25 PER PERSON (Must be a member of the National Wild Turkey Federation) For registration or additional information call: Bob Farkasovsky at 304-842-5515 Send your check payable to NWTF and completed registration form to: WV STATE AWARDS BANQUET c/o BOB FARKASOVSKY 322 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., BRIDGEPORT, WV 26330 NAME:_________________________________________________________________________________ ADDRESS:_____________________________________________________________________________ CITY__________________________________________ STATE___________________ ZIP_____________ EMAIL:_______________________________________ PHONE:__________________________________ Ticket Quantity____________________ x $25 =___________________________ Kompaniets Taras/Shutterstock w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m Winter 2014 Flock Talk 5 6 Flock Talk Winter 2014 w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m WHAT A BUNCH OF JAKES Bob Garrison, Stonewall Jackson Woodlands Tracks Chapter Almost three years ago, the Stonewall Jackson Chapter representing Upshur and Lewis Counties in West Virginia decided to “step it up” with our JAKES program. Although our JAKES programs had been the driving force of our chapter for the 13 years of its existence, we decided to do more to reach out to our area youth. Thanks to Kenny and Wanda Matthews and Donna and Delmas Woody as JAKES coordinators, we have really ramped up the program for our annual JAKES Day. In March of 2013 we sponsored a cooperative project with the West Virginia Departments of Natural Resources to plant persimmon trees at select locations on the Stonewall Jackson Public Hunting area which surrounds Stonewall Jackson Lake near Weston, West Virginia. The goal was to add diversity to the wildlife forage and to give the JAKES something they could point to as an accomplishment and be able to appreciate for many years to come. JAKES Day in August we had a super-improved event. With the effort and assistance of the WV DNR Wildlife Division, WV Division of Forestry, U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Upshur County Sheriff’s Department, NRA Youth Shooting Association, Tennerton Lions Club, and several individuals, we had one “heck of a good” JAKES Day. Both youngsters and parents had a fun and informative day. One of our goals the past two years has been to double the number of JAKES attending; thus far we have managed to accomplish this goal. Our chapter has always felt that our JAKES program is one of the greatest things we can do. With a huge effort from our members and a great deal of assistance from our supporters, we feel that we are “gettin’ it done!” WHAT WE ARE ABOUT Bob Garrison—Stonewall Jackson Woodland Tracks Chapter The first morning of the West Virginia Spring Gobbler season two firsts took place. An enthusiastic young hunter, Isaac Lane, aged 9, killed his first turkey. His neighbor and mentor, Delmas Woody, long time Stonewall Jackson NWTF member also had a first that he was equally proud of. Isaac’s first gobbler was also the first bird that Delmas had ever called in for someone else. This was especially rewarding as Isaac and Delmas are good buddies. As can be seen in the picture, we are not sure who is happier. Our chapter has always especially worked toward the “share the hunt” and our JAKES program. This special day in the spring of 2013 seems to illustrate “what we are all about” and why we do it. 2013 Jakes Day The Jackson County Spurs of the N.W.T.F. had their annual Fishing Derby at Cedar Lakes Conference Center on Sunday July 13th,2013. Once again great weather returned for the more then 75 in attendance, all the kids competed for plaques, and prizes which included gifts from United National Bank, WV forestry Assoc. ,The Great Outdoors, Wal-Mart and the Jeweler’s Touch among others. With the cooperation of Cedar Lakes Conference Center and the Indian Lakes Fisheries, a total of 300 lbs Of Channel Catfish was stocked in one of the ponds. Starting at 1:00 pm in the afternoon, Richard King,(chapter President of the Jackson County Spurs) addressed everyone in attendance. He spoke about the National Wild Turkey Federation and some of their programs they have such as J.A.K.E.S in the outdoors (Juniors Acquiring Knowledge, Ethics, and Sportsmanship), scholarships to graduating seniors, 4-H shooting sports, the Jackson county fair and others. The day was great, with bright sunny skies and lots of local kids to participate. While many kids were catching fish, others enjoyed some of the other activities on hand during the event. Joe Crowder was once again on hand to donate his time and supplies to those wishing to take a hand made fishing lure home with them. The WV Bowhunters set up their 3-D targets and were busy all afternoon teaching archery to those in attendance. These gentleman do not get enough credit for the time they put in traveling around the state and making these events fun and informative for all the kids. One of the new activities this year is the NWTF’s shooting trailer, w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m a trailer fully loaded with everything to set up a small fully enclosed shooting range, including targets, BB guns and ammo. The participants where directed to the shelters and prizes were awarded to those who had the most weight, and to several who were lucky enough to reel in tagged fish. Prizes where given out to all of the kids in attendance. Hotdogs, chips, and drinks were served and Mr. King again addressed the crowd Thanking the many volunteers for the day and reminding everyone that the day would not be possible without the many members, sponsors, underwriters, and donors that attend and/or help with the Annual Banquet that they hold every spring in April. Without this Banquet none of the days events would have taken place. Winter 2014 Flock Talk 7 THE Good ole days By CurtisTaylor, WVDNR, Chief Wildlife Resources / NTWF Technical Committee It was September 14, 2013 and as I found my way to the hickory patch in the eerie pre-dawn light, my mind wandered back to the days of my youth in McDowell County. Except for my gray hair and beard, it was like I had been whisked back in time by some magical machine. My arms cradled a shotgun, my eyes searched the ground for pieces of hickory hulls and pieces of shell, my ears listened for the telltale swish of leafy branch and the unmistakable sound of a hickory nut being open by a squirrel. Yes, this was the way September always began for me; squirrel hunting, the big game of southern West Virginia in the 1960s. This was not recreation, this was war, this was proving one’s self as a hunter, this was showing the world you knew the woods and how to outsmart a wary beast and put food on the table, the best food you could imagine...complete with gravy and biscuits! It was how to earn extra money selling squirrel tails to Mepps Spinner Company and, as I learned in my high school days, a way to impress girls with your successes in the deep woods. And you read right…squirrels were big game, the only game, except for the grouse that we never shot at if they flew…we didn’t waste ammo. In those days I never saw a deer, bears were something you read about in Outdoor Life magazine and turkeys only lived in some magical place called Pocahontas County. I knew that thanks to Howard Linkous, Wildlife Manager and R. Wayne Bailey, Wildlife Biologist from the “DNR” that would “let” the local boys clean the nets they used to trap turkeys. We eagerly agreed because among the leaves, sticks and other debris in the net, we might, just might, find a turkey feather. One of the worst fist fights in my youth was over a central tail feather lodged in the net….I was taking that feather one way or another…along with the black eye that came with it! The stories from these two men about wildlife fascinated me and were a huge influence on my later career decisions. Fast forward to 2013. Yes, squirrel season has returned to the glory days of September. Hickory nut shavings pour down from the tree tops like rain and subsequently my fall tonic of biscuits covered in squirrel gravy. But things are different now. What’s that track..it’s a deer!!!! All those leaves piled up…a turkey has been here scratching for food and that big black pile of half-digested seeds and berries….bear scat! All of these creatures now inhabit my old boyhood haunts…..unthinkable discovers way back then but common occurrences now. How did this happen? Why did it happen? What does it mean? The answers are easy. A dedicated bunch of Wildlife Managers and Wildlife Biologists worked hard to restore these once plentiful game animals to habitats across the state. Their work, coupled with sportsman’s groups cooperation and financial assistance made it happen. None of these success would have been occurred so quickly without support from the public, sportsmen and women and organizations like the National Wild Turkey Federation. In my 35 year tenure with West Virginia Wildlife Resources, NWTF along with the state and local Chapters have invested over $1 million in wildlife restoration, habitat improvement and the education of the youth that will follow in our footsteps. There is an old saying that if you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem…….well, I’m here to tell you, WVNWTF has been and continues to be part of the solution, more so than any other group in this state. So pat yourself on the back…you deserve it. And this fall enjoy the fruits of your labor. Take a quick glance at this year’s hunting regulations. Deer season starts September 28, Bear season starts in some areas Sept. 21 and fall turkey season begins October 12th. This is a historic year for turkey hunters. Not since the 1940’s have hunters had the opportunity to pursue turkeys in so many places. This year, 42 of the State’s 55 counties will have some form of fall turkey hunting, including counties like McDowell, Wyoming, Logan and Lincoln. My sage advice to you is go back to your roots….renew your passion for the woods, see if you still have the skill to find and bring home a mess of squirrels…and take a youngster with you….they will learn much more about wildlife, habitat and how to really hunt than they will ever lean sitting in a treestand over a pile of corn waiting on a deer. While you are squirrel hunting, look for potential places to find turkeys. Acorns will be difficult to find in many places. All our reports indicate spotty oak mast production statewide….but if you are lucky enough to find a patch of oaks that did produce nuts….make a mental note…the turkeys WILL find this place and return until the acorns are gone. On the bright side, beech nuts appear to be plentiful and everyone knows the affinity turkeys have for this food source. Beech crops like these don’t happen every year so by all means take advantage of their abundance. If you want a real challenge, restrict yourself to calling and only shooting an adult gobbler this fall…getting one of these guys into shotgun range is no easy task in the fall. The bottom line is we can look back fondly on the early days of our hunting adventures, but at no time in modern history have we had such opportunity to pursue game. Perhaps one of the biggest challenges folks of my generation have is to relay to younger hunters that it wasn’t always this way…there was the time when the only thing in the woods were squirrels…and they were super wary…not anything like the squirrels you see now at you bird feeder or in town. Explain how the support of hunters, through license fees, Pittman-Robertson excise taxes on firearms and ammunition, political influence and just being involved has made a tremendous difference. Working together as we have in the past, we can continue to see success stories and make “The Good Old Days” NOW. Jakes Take Aim Trailer at National Hunting & Fishing Days T he West Virginia State Chapter and volunteers from several local chapter’s manned the Jakes Take Aim Trailer on September 28 and 29th. We had 559 kids shoot and many of those kids shot for the first time. We also signed up 239 Jakes for free, from the banquets outreach contributions. We hope this will show them the many opportunity’s there are in the great outdoors. 8 Flock Talk Winter 2014 w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m Logan Area Chapter keeps it moving T he Logan Area Chapter seems to be in perpetual motion. The old adage “strike while the iron is hot” comes to mind and the LAC is continually stoking the fire. You can also say it is a chapter for all seasons and the seasons are busy. They started the year off running with a great showing at the annual state awards banquet in January by picking up 5 awards. From there, they worked tirelessly through March to make their Annual Hunting Heritage Banquet another success. They were pleasantly surprised at their banquet when Regional Director Bob Farley presented the chapter with a plaque commemorating ½ million dollars raised for the NWTF. At this year’s banquet, the chapter also celebrated the NWTF’s 40th birthday and the LAC’s 20th year as well. 20 years and still going strong. No sooner than the banquet hall had fallen silent, the chapter was busy preparing for their Annual Jakes Hunts. Although the gobblers got the upper hand this year, the hunters and guides still counted the event as a success. The dust had barely settled from the annual hunts when the committee members were hard at work planning and preparing for the Annual Jakes Fishing Day. Now in its 6th year, it just keeps getting better. This year the chapter added the NWTF Shooting Trailer to the event and it was a hit with all the Jakes in attendance. The Jakes trailer is shipped all around the state to various Jakes events and other events as it is available and this year it was a great addition to the event. Once all the door prizes were given out and the BB’s began to slow down at the Jakes event, the committee was already plotting the next move. Just two short months away, the Chapter was getting ready for the Chief Logan Hunting and Fishing Expo and their second Annual Calling Contest as a part of it. This year’s calling contest was even bigger and better than last and the callers and spectators alike thoroughly enjoyed it. Again this year, the Logan Area Chapter took part in the Youth Challenge at the Expo and was proud to be able to sponsor two lifetime hunting and fishing licenses for the winners of each day. This year, the winners were Jayden Howell and Jackson Akers. Only weeks behind the Expo, the Chapter was busy getting ready for their annual fundraising golf tournament. Each year the turnout helps to pay for the activities and community programs that keep the Chapter hopping. As the hectic summer winds down and the seasons begin to change, the Chapter starts to focus on its Annual Turner Hunters Care outreach of distributing frozen turkeys and hams to various Churches, food pantries, and civic groups to be used for the upcoming Holiday season. This year, the Logan Area Chapter got an extra boost for the Turkey Hunters Care Program from Warner Law Offices of Charleston who gave a very generous $500 donation through their Warner Law Gives Back Program. This donation of money will go a long way toward making the Holidays brighter for our entire community. Finally, as the year and Holidays wind down, the committee members sit back and take a deep breath to relax for just a moment until it is time to start all over again and start preparing for the next banquet. w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m Winter 2014 Flock Talk 9 The Art of turkey hunting By Roger Wolfe T urkey hunting has long been steeped in traditions and not the least of those have been call making. West Virginia is no exception in this as there have been, and still are, a wealth of talented call makers that not only make some top quality sounding calls, but actually create works of art used for calling turkeys. One such call maker is the coalfields very own L.T. Pack. LT prides himself on not so much as the beauty of the call, but how well it will call in that wary old boss bird. From strikers, to trumpets, to pot calls, wingbones and even 10 Flock Talk Winter 2014 scratch boxes, he has made them all, but his favorite is by far the tried and true box call. LT uses a variety of materials and styles in his call making and each call is unique. Woods that are native to West Virginia such as sassafras, walnut, cherry, (and his favorites for their tonal properties) poplar and butternut are a staple of his call making. LT also likes to use a variety of other materials to supplement and accent his calls such as deer antler, elk ivory and some exotic wood species. When asked what brought him to call making LT says “it was a natural progression from his love of turkey w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m hunting and working with wood”. Considering the long list of West Virginia call makers the likes of Gene Blackshire, Lonnie Sneed, Peck Martin, Brian Aliff, Denver Howard, Steve Torman and many, many others, he says he is just carrying on the tradition of call making. LT doesn’t do it with any plans of making a living as a callmaker, he is in it for the call itself. He strives, in every call, to make something that is unique and a one of a kind item that will be handed down as a family treasure. Above all else they must sound good enough to take to the woods and bring home the bird. As he says” if it won’t call birds, it’s just a pretty paperweight”. LT may spend many hours or even weeks on some calls to make it the perfect show piece. While others take less time, they are just as special. By using bits and pieces of different materials to highlight each unique call, he makes them just as special as the bird they are used to entice. One such call that the call maker has dubbed “The Warrior,” is a wingbone call made from the wing bones of a grand old bird who survived a broken wing and went on to fight another day. LT wanted to make a call from the broken wingbones and the fused knot left on the bone to pay homage to the old bird and it only adds more character to the call and the sound that will, hopefully, lead another warrior of the spring woods to the hunter. It’s the special touches such as this that make these calls a piece of art. Sometimes it’s a grizzled old wing bone, or a piece of the shell casing used to harvest a bird but each and every call has a story to tell. The true love of this call maker is the box call. He loves taking a log found on the side of the road, whether it be a blowdown, a salvaged piece of firewood or maybe a block left from a recent timbering operation and turning it into a turkey call and bringing out the highest quality in the wood and the call maker. When asked, the call maker states that it all started in the mid 90’s when he decided he would try his hand making a box call. He dissected a few calls he liked and then started putting his wood working skills to use. Things definitely started to steamroll from there. He keeps looking for ways to make each call special or unique. His calls have been used all across the country calling probably every species of gobbler around. LT especially likes using local woods that have a history, whether it is an old fence post or a piece of grandpa’s barn. It gives the call a special meaning and connection to not only the hunter, but to the history and traditions associated with turkey hunting. One such special project wood he is currently working with is a piece of an old track timber salvaged from a 1920’s era deep mine. The wood itself is nearly 100 years old and has been in place in an abandoned deep mine for over 90 years. Not to mention that after sitting that long in a mine that the wood itself is as black as the coal it was used to transport out of the ground. “It’s woods like this with all that history attached that make a call special” says the call maker. Not all of LT’s calls are destined for the turkey woods, although they are all perfectly capable of it. He has graciously donated to the local NWTF Chapter to be raffled off at their annual Hunting Heritage banquet to raise money earmarked for the JAKES program as well as w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m Photos courtesy of L.T. Pack other worthy causes here and there. These calls are sometimes presentation pieces complete with a stand and display case, but take any one into the woods and the turkeys would be hard pressed to stay away. Some of the calls have brought in as much as $400 at the events. It is the artist’s gift, that LT denies he has, that makes the calls such an eye catching and ear catching thing. Whether they are on display in a den, an office or a turkey vest, make no mistake that this call maker knows how to turn out a spectacular turkey call. And as a turkey hunter, he has also been known to call in a gobbler or two over the years, many of which were with calls made by his own hands. If you ever find yourself fortunate enough to hunt with a one of a kind, hand crafted, LT Pack turkey call, know that you have something special and you aren’t just hunting with a turkey call, you are hunting with a piece of American folk art that is a long standing and honored tradition in the turkey woods. And not just in West Virginia but anywhere turkeys are found. Winter 2014 Flock Talk 11 NWTF/NRCS GoldeN-WiNGed WaRbleR CoNTRibuTioN aGReemeNT WOULD YOU . . . • like a free wildlife management plan written for your land for timber and wildlife to benefit both game and non-game species? phoTo CouRTeSy oF daVid SpeiSeR • like technical and financial assistance to create/ maintain 10 or more acres of young forest habitat on your property? • like to provide critical habitat for a variety of wildlife and plant species that are currently in decline? • like to encourage more pollinator insects like butterflies on your land? • like to enhance your property through proven habitat management activities? phoTo CouRTeSy oF douG liTTle Contact: Cully mcCurdy West Virginia and Virginia NWTF Regional biologist 304-799-4792 cmccurdy@nwtf.net NWTF-NRCS Golden-Winged Warbler Initiative Area NWTF-NRCS Golden-Winged Warbler initiative area our 7 biologists in the designated Working lands for Wildlife –Golden Winged Warbler focal area are currently working with the uSda Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to provide professional assistance through consultation to private landowners, including a written wildlife management plan for your property. if your land qualifies, these professionals can help you attain financial assistance to restore and manage your property, and discuss with you the many benefits of having multiple species of wildlife and plants on your land. The uSda is an equal opportunity provider and employer. 8901012 12 Legend States Golden-Winged Focal Area Flock TalkWarbler Winter 2014 120 60 0 ± w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m 120 Miles save the habitat. save the hunt. The turkey hunting community is facing a critical time in history. Turkey populations in the east are showing a 15% decrease from historic high populations just a couple short decades ago. In comparison, this is the same situation that Northern Bobwhite quail were in 50 years ago and we know all too well how that turned out! We lose 6,000 acres of wildlife habitat every day in this country or an area the size of Yellowstone National Park each year. In addition, hunters are champions of conservation and we are losing hunters faster than we are replacing them, which affects funding for conservation and limits our ability to stand up for our hunting heritage rights. Many hunters struggle to find a place to hunt and research has concluded that is one of the top reasons people quit hunting. The majority of funding for wildlife conservation comes from hunting licenses and self-imposed, excise taxes. As hunter numbers decline, so does funding for conservation. In late 2012, The NWTF rolled out its latest initiative that has the potential to positively impact conservation and the sporting community greater than any previous effort of the organization since the restoration of the Wild Turkey was completed in the late 80’s. The NWTF’s Save the Habitat. Save the Hunt. initiative is a far-reaching national effort that is essential to the future of the upland habitat and wildlife that we cherish. Over the coming years, we will raise $1.2 billion that will be used to have a long-lasting impact on conservation and hunting. This 10 year initiative will be individually tailored by volunteer leadership in each state to meet the critical needs of habitat and outreach to accomplish established goals. We will Save the Habitat and conserve or enhance 4 million acres of habitat by: • Focusing our efforts based on the priorities established by science based on wildlife research • Focusing on four key habitat types; forests, streamside corridors, fields/ meadows, and scrubland/grasslands • Working in areas where it is possible to have a meaningful impact on habitat and wildlife populations We will Save the Hunt and create 1.5 million new hunters by: • Evolving NWTF outreach programs to include hunting experiences to create long term hunting license holders • Being a proactive and visible advocate for hunting and the rights of hunters • Removing barriers and making it easier to introduce new people to hunting • Increasing access to 500,000 acres for public hunting Save the Habitat. Save the Hunt. This initiative will only work by focusing on these core elements. Hunters, conservation and wildlife are connected at such a fundamental level that it would be impossible to for one to continue as we know it without the other two! In July of this year, the West Virginia State Board met for initial planning and to determine how the initiative could be best tailored to achieve the goals in our state. With the help of a moderator designated by our national headquarters in Edgefield SC, we worked through a “SWOT” model to determine our current situation. “SWOT” is an acronym for Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats. Lists were developed by the group for all of these components that are specific to our state to establish priorities and ultimately goals for the organization. The implementation of the program will be ongoing over the life of the 10 year initiative. Chapters are strongly encouraged to have a representative present at future planning meetings that will normally coincide with state board meetings. We have also been asked by our national leadership to identify a Save the Habitat. Save the Hunt. coordinator for each state. If you are interested in filling this vital role, please contact Cully McCurdy at cmccurdy@nwtf.net or Bob Farkasovsky at bfarkasovsky@ nwtf.net. Hunting is Big Business! For all that bemoan the legal use of firearms in America there are millions of us that take up arms to protect our families, target shoot, and yes, hunt wildlife. Hunting is big business. The National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) has recently published some incredible statistics for those of us who hunt. In 2001 there were 14,990,000 hunting licenses sold. The numbers had decreased in 2006 to 14,620,000 and the progressives celebrated that hunting numbers were in a decline. Excessive celebration penalty… the 2011 numbers show that we picked up 10,000 more hunting license (there are 19.3 million hunters total, remember everyone doesn’t buy a license). You might be surprised to learn where the growth is; women! Women now make up 11% of the hunters in America. With 11,600,000 Big Game hunters in both sexes comprising the largest sector of hunting the money adds up. Money? Yes it cost us to hunt, target shoot, and protect our property and families but the money has added up to an astonishing economic impact in America. Hunting is bigger than Google! Hunters alone contributed $38.3 Billion in 2011 to the American economy (Google-$ 37.9 Billion). A large share of our hunting dollars goes toward hunting licenses; you know those things you complain about but know are a necessity. Hunting license fees have increased from $642 million in 2001 to $790 million in 2011. Those fees have increased to provide better hunting opportunities in the forms of access and habitat across the nation. There is some bad news as I look at the numbers. Small game hunting is in a decline; from a high of nearly 6 million hunters in 2001 to slightly over 4 million small game hunters in 2011. w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m By Charlie Nichols I know that it is extremely difficult to grouse and rabbit hunt on WMAs today and all it would take is some habitat improvements that would help our big game turkey and deer populations at the same time. Migratory bird hunters are holding steady at nearly 4 million hunters. I want to see if Duck Dynasty helps boost those numbers in 2012, like the movie “A River Runs Through It” increased fly fishing participation. You can help the cause by buying a license, taking your kids hunting, and getting your significant other involved in the sport. You have already made a great step in protecting our hunting heritage by being a member of the NWTF, but we can all always do a little more. Get involved by attending DNR Commission meetings and joining other conservation groups to make a difference in increasing access and habitat improvements. Winter 2014 Flock Talk 13 the grandest slams of O n West Virginia’s first Youth Day Spring Gobbler season nine years ago, Bob Leasure called in a Big Gobbler for his oldest grandson, Mackenzie now 21, and decided he would try to complete a Grandpa/Grandson Slam, by calling in a gobbler for each of his grandsons to shoot as their first turkey, a slam that would have more meaning than trampling all over the country for the different sub-species of the wild turkey. The slam would be representative of the same, with each grandson’s gobbler representative of the four sub-species needed to complete a turkey hunting grand slam. He would do the calling and his four grandsons would do the killing, of their first turkey. Another amazing aspect to the slam is that the boys killed their first turkey chronologically according to their age; Mack, Skyler, Riley and Parker. “It took over nine years to complete this thing, but Parker was a baby when I decided to try to do it,” says Bob. It soon became a family affair as the young boys 14 Flock Talk Winter 2014 each waited and anticipated their turn to help “Grandpa” with his slam. Mack’s Bird was to be Grandpa’s Merriams. Possibly the easiest of the four sub-species to hunt, and Mack’s bird was as text book as they get and worked out just the way we wish all out hunts would. Bob and Mack had done their scouting in anticipation of the first ever West Virginia Youth Spring Gobbler hunt and had roosted some birds the night before. Dawn couldn’t come fast enough for the excited hunter and his Grandpa. The next morning the weather was not what turkey hunters like for the first morning or any morning, RAIN. As fate would have it the rain subsided just at first light and the hunters took to the woods to intercept the gobblers as they greeted the morning. Not far into their walk they heard the first gobbles and decided it was time to set up. Bob got Mack situated as he took a few more steps to place the decoy. With final instructions to get ready to shoot right where the decoy was set and very anxious Mackenzie awaited his first w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m By Bob Leasure and Roger Wolfe turkey ever. It didn’t take long and soon he watched as his guide whispered “When he gets between those tree stumps put that bead on his neck and let him have it.” BOOM! The turkey flopped right past the decoy. “Do I shoot him again?” Mack asked anxiously. “Not unless you like to eat buckshot,” a positively tickled Grandpa laughed. Mackenzie’s bird weighed in at 22 pounds with a 10 inch beard and one inch spurs. Not bad for the first leg of the Grandest Slam a Grandpa could think of. Skyler’s Bird was to be Grandpa’s “Rio Grande”. Though not as vocal or quick to the call as the Merriam, the Rio Grande is a challenging bird to hunt, and Skyler’s bird fit the bill to a tee. The quest for Skyler’s bird got off to a rocky start with a couple of close calls on the youth gobbler hunt and the long wait till the next weekend when Skyler could hunt again with his Grandpa. That next Saturday finally arrived and Skyler said, “Why don’t you bring your shotgun? Maybe we can double like you and uncle Zac did on his first turkey?” Those words would prove to be very fortuitous for the young hunter. The two hunters made their way to where Bob knew a wise old Tom had been calling home. As the duo neared the wooded edge of an old field the big bird sounded off. The two began to set up. Skyler loaded the first shell in his 20 gauge pump, just as Bob quietly loaded his old trusty 12 gauge, one gobbled again. A few yelps and purrs later and the hook had been set and the old bird was on his way. Just as those old Tom’s do, the bird hung up for about twenty minutes before finally Bob whispered, “Don’t Move! I see his fan coming to the right of the decoy, there’s his red head, he’s got a thick beard, see him?” “Yeah, Yeah I see him. Shoot him?” Skyler whispered back. “If you’re on his neck shoot him” Bob urged. Skylar had flipped the safety off and pulled the trigger but nothing happened. “What’s wrong?” a now concerned grandpa asked. “It won‘t shoot” Skylar replied. A few tense moments later and it was time for the big switch. As quietly and secretively as they could, Bob and Skylar had to switch guns with the turkey only a few short yards away. “It’s gonna kick.” “ You’ll be alright, I promise” Bob assured the young hunter. After maneuvering the longer barrel into position where the birds head would emerge from behind some small trees Skyler slowly squeezed the trigger. BOOM! The big Tom rolled over the hill and never flopped. “It didn’t kick! It didn’t kick!” Skyler proclaimed. “I told you it’d be alright” Bob chimed. After a lot of hugging and celebrating and thanking God for an unforgettable hunt the hunters found that in loading Skylar’s borrowed pump shotgun they he hadn’t fully closed the slide to engage the action, luckily Grandpa and his trusty 12 gauge were there. Skyler’s bird weighed in at twenty four pounds with a thick 10 inch beard and 1 ¼” spurs. Half of the Grandest Slam was in the books and only more memories to go. Riley’s Bird was to be grandpa’s “Osceola”. Often associated with the damp and humid conditions of Florida, it was fitting that Riley’s bird would be taken on another wet and rainy youth hunt. After hearing about his brother’s bird for two years it was finally Riley’s turn to help Grandpa along on the Grandest Slam. As the date for Riley’s hunt approached Riley, his dad Chad, and of course Grandpa headed out to pattern his new JAKES 20 gauge shot gun he had won at a recent JAKES event. After patterning and picking out the right shell, it was time to wait for the day of the hunt. Riley and his dad had wanted to share the experience with Grandpa, but didn’t want to risk ruining the slam with too many people on the hunt so they didn’t say anything, until Bob mentioned that Chad should come along because he was getting tired of carrying turkeys out of the woods for everyone else. Chad quickly agreed, but with the stipulation that they make turkey jerky if they were successful in getting a bird. When the youth season finally arrived the trio was headed to the hunting grounds when Bob had to tell Riley to turn his Ipod down. “We are all going to be deaf from that noise!” Bob scolded and called Riley a “Rock-n-N-Roll” turkey hunter. To which Riley promptly answered, “I rock and the turkeys roll.” To which the group had a good chuckle. As they arrived at their chosen hunting spot and the rain wore on, Bob asked, “Do we want to get wet or go back home?” The answer was a resounding “WET!” and off they went. As they walked down a narrow ridge between two fields it looked like the perfect set up if they didn’t get rained-out. After a few soft yelps and a fly down cackle a distant gobbler sounded off. A louder yelp produced gobbles in several different directions. After several gobbles Chad had to stand to reposition and quickly sat back down announcing, “There’s a whole flock of birds coming out the ridge!” Soon the birds were only sixty yards away and closing. There were three jakes headed right for the young hunter, enticed by smooth calls made from his Grandpa. Chad quickly asked Riley if he would shoot a jake; to which Riley fondly remembered what long time turkey hunter Denver Howard had told him in a safety seminar about there being a lot of jakes and they should kill them, and replied, “Yes!” The birds finally worked into a good shooting position and Chad said, “Shoot the big one”. Riley quickly answered “No beard! I am on the one on the left.” With that he put the bead on the jakes neck and pulled the trigger. POW! The jake started flopping and the bigger jake immediately started flogging it. Chad immediately jumped up and shouted, “He did it, He got him!” Riley looked over at his Grandpa and asked if it was OK to shoot a jake to which he proudly replied with a big smile, “it’s better than OK, it’s perfect.” On the way home with Riley’s trophy, he proudly proclaimed, “I rock w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m – and the turkeys roll!” drawing a heartfelt laugh from the hunting party. With that said, three quarters of the Grandest Slam was complete. Riley’s bird sported a 6 inch beard and weighed in at seventeen pounds. Parker’s Bird was to be Grandpa’s “Eastern”. Unquestionably the most wary and difficult to hunt, not only because of the keen and cantankerous nature of the bird, but also because of the terrain it inhabits. It is only fitting that Parker’s bird would be four years in the making with passed up birds and close opportunities along the way. In 2012 Bob was able to call in two jakes on the youth day, but Parker elected to pass on them because he could see three big gobblers just out of range. He waited for an hour but the big boys just wouldn’t come in. This just shows how deep turkey hunting is in his veins, willing to risk not getting one, to wait for that boss bird to come in. However, the 2013 Youth gobbler season would turn out different and in Parker’s favor. This year on youth day after his Grandpa was able to call a beautiful gobbler off the roost only to have it stolen by three hens. The duo had to play the waiting game and hope the gobbler once again found himself lonely. About an hour later, Bob made some aggressive clucks and purrs and the gobbler broke free of the hens and circled in to their set-up. Parker patiently waited and the big Tom jumped up on a stump, the sun shining brightly on his iridescent plumage, showing the surrounding world that he was the boss bird. Parker said that it was the most beautiful bird he ever saw; and when the bird jumped off the stump it walked right in front of the bead of his shotgun. As they say, “The rest is history.” After tagging his bird and a lot of picture taking, hugs and high fives he thanked God and became a turkey hunter for life. Not to mention he also helped his Grandpa complete one of the Grandest of Slams any of us could hope to complete. Parker’s bird weighed in at 24 pounds sported a 10 ½” beard and carried one inch spurs. Since his quest for the Grandest Slam started, Bob says, “My youngest son, Zac has a little boy, now four years old, if I call in his first turkey maybe I can make it a Royal Slam.” Bob’s love of sharing the outdoors doesn’t end with his grandson’s. Bob is also the coordinator for the West Virginia JAKES Program through the WVNWTF and the president of the Middle Island Longbeards Chapter. The JAKES program is full of knowledge and can provide opportunities for children that they wouldn’t otherwise be able to enjoy. To join JAKES/XTREME JAKES visit the state chapter website, wvstatechapternwtf.com today or better yet look for an upcoming JAKES event from a local chapter near you and take the kids out and see what all the fun and excitement is really about. Information on all the local chapters and their upcoming events can be found at the website listed above. Winter 2014 Flock Talk 15 West Virginia WILD October The REAL Opening of the Hunting Season By Frank Jezioro Director, West Virginia Division of Natural Resources T ime surely does fly by the older you get. In years past I was ready, straining at the bit, in anticipation of October. Each cool morning in September would bring visions of falling, swirling multicolored leaves. It always reminded me of the vision you get when looking through one of the old kaleidoscopes. Each evening when I fed the dogs I could sense nervousness on their part. They dont have a calendar but a built-in sense of coming events. In the past few years the season seems to sneak up on me and I find myself scurrying around the last few days before the opening of the season. I squirrel hunted a morning in September but didnt deer or bear hunt. Now, with October closing in, I was busy checking shotguns and shells for grouse, woodcock and turkey hunting. Making sure all equipment was ready is a part of the fun of waiting for the seasons of October. There is no place in West Virginia that compares to the High Country of our North Central Mountains in October. There always seems to be a breeze stirring the color-splashed leaves, sending them turning and twisting toward the earth. A light vest feels good in the morning. Winding along the Cheat River on the way to Tucker County was a beautiful drive. The fog was lifting from the cool water and formed a white ceiling shutting out the morning sun. About half way up Cheat Mountain I broke through the fog and entered a brilliantly sun lit landscape. Part of why I hunt is just being in this country. The solitude, serenity, lack of traffic and human activity are all a big part of the hunting experience. When I throw in the dogs, a great old classic American-made shotgun and the health to walk among Gods great Outdoors, I can ask or expect nothing more. Taking a bird or two will be great for sure and add to the days experience, but not taking any will not detract from the day. With the clicking off of each mile, the anticipation builds until I am finally at a familiar wide spot on the old logging road. I am pleased to see that the hawthorn has done well and the thorn apples are hanging heavy. This particular old grown-up farm has both red and yellow haws. During the first part of the season you can bet that if there is a grouse in the country he will be close to the old hawthorn trees where he finds both food and shelter. I see that the dogwood and crab apples have also done well. These soft mast types will take the grouse, deer and turkey well into the winter. But it is the oak, the acorns, that add the nourishment and fat they need to make it through the harsh mountain winter. It takes me a minute to stretch and straighten up completely after stepping out of the truck and the dogs show no patience. They know where we are and why we have come and delay is not part of the day. With the tiny sleigh bell around Snoopys neck and a few 20 gauge shells for the Ithaca double in my pocket, it is time to start another years adventure. Each season is like a new chapter in the hunters book of life. Enjoy each and every outing to its fullest, for we never know how many chapters the Good Lord has written in our book! Be safe. Note: Check the WVDNR Hunting Regulations Summary brochure for details of all the fall 2013 hunting seasons in West Virginia. Wounded WArrior Bear Hunt The Potomac Headwaters Chapter, teamed up with the Potomac Highlands Warrior Outreach to help guide 12 Wounded Warriors September 23 and 24 on a bear hunt. This was the fourth year that the chapter has helped with the hunt. The Potomac Highlands Warrior Outreach was formed in Pendleton County in 2010. They work directly with the Walter Reed National Medical Center and various veteran’s hospitals in WV. Keith Thompson Chapter President said “It is a honor to help give something back to these special people who share the same love for the outdoors as we do.” If your local Chapter has any events or happenings coming up, be sure to take lots of pictures and make lots of memories. Submit them for the 2015 Flock Talk to Roger Wolfe at wolfeii@hotmail.com. 16 Flock Talk Winter 2014 w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m State Chapter Awards Banquet local chapter presidents Boone County Limbhangers Tommy Grant 455 Glen Drive Wharton, WV 25208 304-247-7755 agrant70@hotmail.com Cathedral Longbeards Randy Strawser PO Box 156 Aurora, WV 26705 304-735-5405 hunterstr@yahoo.com Charleston Chapter Chris Deweese 117 Grant Drive Sissonville, WV 25320 Chestnut Ridge Longbeards Jack Bell PO Box 231 Reedsville, WV 26547 304-864-3859 bigwater73@yahoo.com Doddridge County Tailfans Randy Hutson 1306 Skelton Run Wallace, WV 26448 304-782-3605 Eastern Divide Bryan McCurdy Rt. 1, Box 22 Greenville, WV 24945 304-772-3708 Eastern Panhandle Carl Kief 705 New York Avenue Martinsburg, WV 25401 304-263-2179 Lewis Wetzel Terry Heinzman 105 North 5th Avenue Paden City, WV 26159 304-337-9239 Four Rivers Brian Prim 2-A Greenbrier Avenue Hurricane, WV 25526 304-757-0572 Logan Area Doyle Gore PO Box 112 Holden, WV 25625 304-239-2025 doylegore@suddenlink.net Fayette Longspurs Darrell Hypes 117 Frank Street Fayetteville, WV 25840 304-574-1942 darrell.hypes@siemens.com Guyandotte Longbeards Kenneth Stiltner 270 Ramey Addition Rd Wyoming, WV 24898 304-732-7840 Middle Island Longbeards Robert Leasure HC 69, Box 15 Alma, WV 26320 Mid-Ohio Valley Brent Lambert 4998 Braun Road Belpre, OH 45714 304-483-9516 Jackson County Spurs Richard King 205 Quail Run Ripley, WV 25271 304-372-6801 Mingo Beard and Spurs Harold Davis PO Box 457 Lenore, WV 25676 304-475-4641 Hbdavis33@yahoo.net John “Mutt” Martin Gregg Miller 403 West Brentwood Avenue Moundsville, WV 26041 304-845-9742 Mountain Lakes Mike Shaffer 185 Curry Ridge Road Napier, WV 26631 mshaffer@frontier.net North Central Mountaineers Jim Simms Rt. 1, Box 537 C Mt. Clare, WV 26408 304-622-2359 jmsimms4hss@yahoo.com Stonewall Jackson Woodland Tracks Bob Garrison Rt. 4, Box 622 Buckhannon, WV 26201 304-472-5204 wvtimberguy@hotmail.com Northern Panhandle Rick Kinney 3721 Marland Heights Rd Weirton, WV 26062 304-224-1208 kinney_rick@yahoo.com Tucker County Longbeards George Wilfong 4061 Location Road Parson, WV 26287 304-478-2282 Pocahontas Strutters Katrina Trumbo 8854 Muddy Run Road Burnsville, VA 24487 540-925-2219 ktrumbo@snowshoemtn.com Tygart Valley Don Thomason PO Box 177 Beverly, WV 26253 304-636-6454 mabiesawman@yahoo.com Potomac Headwaters Keith Thompson PO Box 56 Franklin, WV 26807 Wayne County Longbeards Bruce Crockett Rt. 3, Box 3061 Wayne, WV 25570 304-272-6196 Bcrockett1@suddenlink.net Potomac Highland Robert Snyder Rt. 1, Box 105F Ridgeley, WV 26753 304-358-7639 WV State Chapter Chris Deweese 304-415-4827 Pricketts Fort Limbhangers Mike Tarley RR 2, Box 252 Fairmont, WV 26554 304-825-1434 miketarley@daviselectric.net w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m Winter 2014 Flock Talk 17 The Saga of IH357 I Photo courtesy NWTF t was hatched out in the Canaan Mountain sector of the West Virginia highlands within the borders of the vast Monongahela National Forest. Here was one of the last wild blood bastions for his species whose population levels were nearly extirpated earlier in the Twentieth Century. White men and their rapid, widespread logging practices and market hunting had all but done the wild turkey in. Fortunately for them, their numbers were improving per changing standards toward the latter part of that same century. However, there were other more widespread areas that weren’t as fortunate as those preserve like zones the Monongahela provided. Wild turkeys were in fact extirpated over the vast majority of their former range. It might take decades or scores of years to naturally repopulate them. That is if it weren’t for this new-fangled program. Fast forward now to September, 1988 and this young turkey was now a few months old, a poult of likely just a few pounds but growing fast. A flocking species, this social bird fed, loafed and roosted with its siblings, its mother hen of course plus other hens and their young of the year birds. Such brood flocks can reach a respectable number of his, hers and theirs, so to speak. The sordid species history alluded to meant nothing to our young poult. Just staying alive kept him preoccupied. Then one day, a deafening blast startled the young bird. Simultaneously, a circus like net draped over him and his flock mates. In a panic, the netted bird flapped ‘til it was exhausted, but to no avail. Each second seemed like an eternity. Just then, some proud WVDNR 18 By Bob Fala Flock Talk Winter 2014 wildlife manager tucked the net to prevent any birds from escaping. Turns out that big bang was that from a cannon propelled “rocket-net” set off by the guy standing over the netted flock pinned to the ground. This turkey trapper was assisting with one of the Mountain State’s “trap and transfer”programs. They take true-blue, wild blooded turkeys from here where they are, to where they ain’t, pure and simple. Turns out, this batch of birds was designated for a turkey-less zone some 200 miles south along the Logan and Mingo county line. The country there was warmer, quite steep and the folks talked a little bit different, but the young turkey had no way of knowing any of this. It was merely confused, but still alive. And lest we forget to mention it, this particular bird had a band crimped onto its leg. Henceforth, it was 1H357. The new home release area had its similar share of perils just like back home. There were foxes, bobcats, free-roaming dogs and the ever dangerous human species. But he did survive in his new environment. We know he made it to full-fledged Jakehood as a nice young gobbler circa the spring of 1989, with kind of a cackling but proud voice. By the following spring of 1990, he was a fine two-year old with a booming gobble to with it. He was already passing his genes on to future generations. By the spring of 1991, he was in his prime having grown to 21 pounds and sporting a fine, long beard. His plumage and spurs were a bit tattered showing the normal wear, and tear of strutting, display and other mating activities of a boss gobbler. His feet were made for walking since he was w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m now nearly 15 miles from his original release site. One late April day that fine spring of 1991, he was perched high up on a mountain where his thunderous gobble could be heard by prospective hens from way off in the distance. It was getting late in the mating season and it was also spring gobbler season. In response to some hen calls, our gobbler was fooled once again. This time the roar was that from a shotgun. The hen calls were made by a human imposter, a hunter donned in camouflage. With those lead pellets flying faster than the speed of sound, 1H357 likely never even heard the report. I was the hunter that fired that shot. It was only upon retrieval of this grand trophy that I noted the banded leg. It was District V DNR biologist, Tom Dotson that filled me in on both the trap and transfer history that went along with the band number. This turkey’s demise was met with much respect and some regret. But maybe it was a bit poetic. This turkey, its leg band and me, it was just a story in need of telling. Where there were no turkeys, there are now turkeys and they’re doing just find and providing a lot of recreational hunting opportunities to boot. The hunting dollars through the cooperating state game agencies as augmented by the National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF) have done yeoman’s work in this arena. And as for 1H537, rest assured that I told the folks all about you! (This and 38 other varied West Virginia wildlife accounts are featured in Bob Fala’s book, “Ramblin’ Outdoors,” available through McClain Printing Company.) 2014 WEST VIRGINIA HUNTING HERITAGE BANQUET SCHEDULE West Virginia State Awards Banquet Jan. 11, 2014 Days Inn Convention Center Flatwoods, WV Bob Farkasovsky, 304-842-5515 North Central Mountaineer Feb. 22, 2014 Village Square Conference Center Clarksburg, WV Vince Smith, 304-476-0070 Boone County Limbhangers Jan. 18, 2014 Van High School Van, WV Tommy Grant, 304-247-7756 Mid-Ohio Valley Feb 28, 2014 Nemesis Shriners Building Parkersburg, WV Brian Townsend, 304-422-6181 Pricketts Fort Limbhangers Jan. 18, 2014 Westchester Village Fairmont, WV Phil Tarley, 304-363-8730 Wayne County Longbeards March 1, 2014 Lavalette Fire Department 4502 Rt. 152, Lavalette, WV 25535 Bruce Crockett, 304-544-6196 Stonewall Jackson Woodland Tracks Feb. 1, 2014 Stonewall Jackson Resort Roanoke, WV Bob Garrison, 304-517-3809 Four Rivers March 6, 2014 Big Sandy SuperStore Arena Huntington, WV Mike Kirtley, 304-634-1460 WV State Feb. 6, 2014 Embassy Suites Conference Center Charleston, WV Chris Deweese, 304-343-4126 Mountain Lakes Feb. 7, 2014 Day’s Inn Convention Center Flatwoods, WV Mike Shaffer, 304-452-8357 Pocahontas Strutters Feb. 8, 2014 Pocahontas Opera House Marlinton, WV Patrick McCurdy, 304-799-4762 { Middle Island Longbeards March 8, 2014 Momentive Performance Park Training Facility Bens Run, WV Bob Leasure, 304-758-4374 Tygart Valley March 15, 2014 Beverly Fire Dept Beverly, WV Ray Mearns, 304-338-6025 Logan Area March 15, 2014 Earl Ray Tomblin Convention Center Logan, WV Doyle Gore, 304-239-2606 Northern Panhandle March 21, 2014 Knights of Columbus Weirton, WV Rick Kinney, 304-224-1208 Fayette Long Spurs April 18, 2014 Beckley Convention Center Beckley, WV Darrell Hypes, 304-573-9081 Chestnut Ridge Longbeards March 22, 2014 Knights of Columbus Morgantown, WV Richard Hardin, 304-284-1642 Cathedral Longbeards April 19, 2014 Reedsville Fire Department Reedsville, WV Randy Strawser, 304-735-5405 Eastern Panhandle March 28, 2014 Berkley County Youth Fairgrounds Martinsburg, WV Scott Gainer, 304-264-0769 Eastern Divide April 25, 2014 Union Church of God Fellowship Center Union, WV Bryan McCurdy, 304-772-3708 Potomac Highland’s March 29, 2014 Romney V.F.D. Romney, WV Bob Smith, 304-822-5081 Potomac Headwaters June 7, 2014 South Fork Fire Dept Brandywine, WV Larry Simon, 304-358-2134 Jackson County Spurs April 11, 2014 Jackson Hall / Cedar Lakes Conference Center Ripley, WV Richard King, 304-372-6801 Jack Martin Chapter Mingo Beard & Spurs July 17, 2014 Opry House Delbarton, WV Harold Davis, 304-475-4832 (formerly - Guyandotte Longbeards) April 12, 2014 Wyoming West High School Pineville, WV Alan Stiltner, 304-732-6585 Lewis Wetzel April 12, 2014 Mollohan Center / Wetzel County 4 – H Camp New Martinsville, WV Lind Adams, 304-455-5484 Tucker County Longbeards July 26, 2014 Davis Fire Hall Davis, WV Eileen Wilfong, 304-259-5590 John E. “Mutt” Martin August 8, 2014 Moundsville Fire Department Moundsville, WV Gregg Miller, 304-845-9742 The NWTF is looking for volunteers to develop new chapters and banquet committees. Or join an existing committee and expand your network and the good you can do for wildlife and hunting. { Contact Bob Farkasovsky at 304.842.5515 bfarkasovsky@nwtf.net w v s t a t e c h a p t e r n w t f. c o m Winter 2014 Flock Talk 19 Non-Profit Org U.S. POSTAGE PAID Lehigh Valley, PA PERMIT # 159 in Conserve. Hunt. Share. INVESTFUTURE our ! s e Y I’d like to join the National Wild Turkey Federation, a non-profit organization dedicated to the conservation of the wild turkey and the preservation of the hunting tradition. This membership also enrolls me in my state and local chapters. ❏ Regular Member: $35 ❏ Sponsor Member: $250 ❏ Women in the Outdoors: $35 Member Benefits Join the NWTF and enjoy exclusive membership benefits, including: ➢ Subscriptions to the NWTF’s magazines ➢ Networking opportunities with hunting and conservation-minded people at NWTF banquets. ➢ Exclusive merchandise opportunities ➢ Access to articles and helpful hunting and conservation tips. ➢ Members-only message board access. ➢ Outreach programs for youth, women and people with disabilities. ➢ Exclusive online deals. ➢ Scholarships for students. ➢ Free or discounted seed through Project HELP and the Conservation Seed Program. (in participating states) ➢ Discounted land enhancement materials including tree seedlings, grass seeds, oat hay, netting and more through the NWTF’s regional and national habitat programs. (in participating states) ➢ Land management advice from certified biologists. ➢ Habitat field days and workshops. ➢ Turkey records registration. ➢ The opportunity to vote in Board of Directors elections. ➢ NWTF decal. ❏ JAKES Member (ages 12 & under): $10 ❏ Extreme JAKES Member (ages 13 - 17): $10 ❏ Wheelin’ Sportsmen Member: $35 Name: (please print)____________________________________ Signature:___________________________________________ Address:____________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ City:________________________ State:_____ Zip:__________ Phone:______________________________________________ ❏ Master Card ❏ Visa Credit Card #:_______________________________________ Exp. Date:___________________________________________ (Make checks payable to NWTF) Send complete application to: Bob Farkasovsky • 322 Pennsylvania Ave. • Bridgeport, WV 26330 w w w. W V S ta te C h a p te r N W T F. c o m