A couple foxes moved onto our property....Still lots of squirrels but the turkeys and grouse have disappeared. Hopefully nature does its cycle...or I take up fox calling![]()
You mean fox shooting
Rob
A couple foxes moved onto our property....Still lots of squirrels but the turkeys and grouse have disappeared. Hopefully nature does its cycle...or I take up fox calling![]()
Well good news for me anyway, i talked to my buddy he was just up at his property and said he saw 10-12 grouse on his walks over his days up
at the property. There is a big patch of thorns with red berries they like to hang out in and sure enough they are there. Looks like some chicken for hunting season.
We will only harvest two or three so as not to rid the property of future birds.
hawthorns. aka thornapples. I had grouse eating haws in the yard of my camp pretty much every evening this fall. Seemed to be a bumper crop.
A few years back I seen a three year old willow ptarmigan just west of Cold Lake. It looked like d of comical because it looked almost as large as a barnyard chicken. I held off shooting it because I thought it was a hen spruce grouse with its molted brown coat in September. Turns out it was willow ptarmigan still in its warmer months plumage.Yes they are cyclic which is pure weather and food reliant. As mentioned they do require soft snow for thermal protection in winter, especially in my part of world where it can get quite cool in winter. Aspen buds are a big food source. Spring hatches can be decimated by cold and wet. Grouse are at the bottom of food chain, they get preyed upon by many. A three year old grouse is considered elderly in their world. Stray cats and plain old house cats can also be hard on the young in your part of world. I have a lot of grouse and snow shoe rabbits on my property and I don't shoot any, I go down the road a piece and shoot the governments grouse. I have several pairs of Lynx and fox on the property so I leave the grouse and snow shoe rabbits alone to feed the fox and Lynx as I like to see them.
Just a personal observation with no scientific backing but I suspect some natural selection is at work. I always seem to notice the skittish and more alert grouse vs. the dumb ones that just sit there even when you miss shooting them. I suspect the “ dumb” gene is slowly eliminated and nature selects for the “alert” gene ( if there’s even such a thing!)
So grouse become harder to find over time as they become more wary of human predation.
Darwin at work!
Not harder to find from my experience, as they all need gravel or grit in their crops to help down grind food to digest it. They’re just quicker, which means you have to be quicker when you see them.
We raise chickens and I see a lot of similarities in feeding and behaviour between the two. I spend a bit of time watching my chickens as they’re entertaining but I also have picked up a lot of behaviour and body language from them that has helped me while out grouse hunting. They both need grit and will come out to the road and both will sun themselves if the weather all of a sudden changes from wet and cold to sunshine.
@Butcherbill,
Chickens in your backyard in NW? Must have been a while ago. Now you find drunks!
Glad you actually learnt something while drinking!
I gotta try that grouse trick next time I go hunting. I shoot them with a .22, not a .410 or 20ga. I’m still a newbie so just seeing a grouse makes me happy! I’ve seen guys go at them with .308s and 7mmMag from close range to 100yds. Not one actually got a hit as they were aiming for the head.




























