TIME TO HUNT RIGHT HERE ON US

For folks who live for the chance to take up a gun or bow and head for the woods, that time is upon us. In fact, it has already started with dove season which kicked off Labor Day weekend.
I had the privilege of getting to sit in a dove field opening weekend. How did I do? More on that later.

In just a few weeks on October 1, squirrel season kicks off. I’m of the opinion that squirrel season opening has lost some of its glamour for lots of hunters. It used to be that the Saturday when squirrel season opened was almost like a national holiday. In fact, some areas had the reputation of scheduling Friday night football games on Thursday instead to give squirrel chasers the chance to head for the camp on Friday night in anticipation of daylight the next morning when squirrel season opened.

For me, opening day of squirrel season was always like Sunday mornings when I grew up. If it was Sunday, heading for Sunday School and church was not to be questioned. You didn’t have to think about it; you were headed to church. Same thing for opening day of squirrel season; you didn’t think about it. None of the kids I grew up with even considered missing it.

When I was too young to do it alone, my dad took me along just to watch how he did it. I still get shivers a bit in remembering sitting by his side on a moss-covered log back in the woods
near a stand of hickories that were producing hickory nuts. Even though it was dark, I felt safe
and secure because I was sitting next to my daddy.

A few years later, my dad felt like I had served my apprenticeship well enough and I was
permitted to pack along my little single shot .22 rifle. Still later, the two of us would go to the
woods and I was allowed to hunt alone; daddy would whisper instructions as to which trees to
watch as he moved off quietly into the next scope of woods.

I can remember, especially on one afternoon hunt, the hour was getting late, daddy was off there somewhere and I began to become concerned that he’d forgotten about me and headed
home without me. I heard leaves crunch and was sure a bear or wolf was about to attack when I
saw the source of the sound and breathed a big sigh of relief; it was daddy coming back for me.

Deer season for Area 2 archery hunters kicks off the same day as squirrel season, October 1st. I have never bow hunted but I always looked forward to opening of gun season for deer, which opens October 22 for hunters using primitive firearms and October 19 in Area 2 for gun hunters.

I have vivid memories of my introduction to deer hunting. I was living in Homer at the time. It was a chilly November day in 1967 when I joined a friend, James White, his sons and a group of other hunters to gather in Summerfield to link up with Bill Bailey who had a fine pack of beagle hounds. James set me up along a narrow pipeline to wait and see if Bailey’s hounds would send a deer my way. They did and I was able to draw a bead on a nice 10 point buck the beagles chased my way.

It is not unusual today to hear stories of youngsters downing nice bucks from the comfort of box stands. While I’m proud for them, many of those same kids don’t know how to sneak up on a squirrel, and I recommend that dads spend time in the woods like my daddy did with me to teach the basics of hunting squirrels which will make them better hunters for other game.

Now about my opening day dove hunt. I sat with friends on a plot that had been expertly prepared for doves. There were sunflower seeds and millet that grew there and had been bush-
hogged to give the doves a food source. Their appetites must have been for something else
because no doves showed up at the buffet prepared for them. We never fired a shot.

That’s the way it goes sometimes but just being out there provides a nice reward in itself.

”Hunter waiting for doves that never showed up.” Keith Johnson photo

FISHING REPORT 

BLACK BAYOU –No report this week. Contact Honey Hole Tackle Shop 323-8707 for latest
information.
OUACHITA RIVER – The water is on a slow fall with bass fishing starting to improve. Crappie
ae fair in the tops in the river on shiners or jigs. For latest information, contact the Honey Hole
Tackle Shop at 323-8707.
LAKE D’ARBONNE – Bass are schooling fairly good around Gills Ferry and north of the
bridge on Corney. Shad imitations are taking some fish. Crappie are still in their summer pattern
and hanging around channel edges. Shiners and jigs are working. Some are also being caught in
the bayou below the spillway. Bream are scattered and fair while catfish are biting cold worms
fished off the banks. For latest information, call Anderson Sport Center at 368-9669 or Honey
Hole Tackle Shop at 323-8707.
LAKE CLAIBORNE – Crappie continue be in their summer pattern and are hanging around
submerged brush. Shiners and jigs are working on these fish. Bass fishing has been best fishing
around the boat docks and piers using soft plastics and crank baits. Also, night fishing for bass
has been fairly good on dark colored plastic worms and dark spinner baits. Catfishing is fair on
yo-yos baited with cold worms. No report on stripers. For latest information, call Kel’s Cove at
927-2264 or Terzia Tackle at 278-4498.
CANEY LAKE – Surprisingly, the bream are still biting quite well on night crawlers. Bass have
been fair with best fish reporting in at 9.2 pounds. The ribbon tail plastic worm seems to be
working best. Some are still schooling and hitting shad imitation lures. Crappie continue to be
best fishing shiners or jigs around deep brush. No report on catfish this week. For information
contact Hooks Marina at 249-2347, Terzia Tackle at 278-4498 or the Honey Hole Tackle Shop at 323-8707.
LAKE POVERTY POINT – The only species biting this week seem to be the catfish. Lots of
smaller eating sized fish along with a few bigger ones have been caught. Nothing to report on
bass, crappie or bream. For latest reports, call Poverty Point Marina at 318/878-0101.
LAKE ST. JOHN – No report. For information, call Ken Mahoney at 318-201-3821.


To report an issue or typo with this article – CLICK HERE

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *