Jefferson Approves Urban Hunting Season for Deer!!!

Jefferson Approves Urban Hunting Season for Deer

The Jefferson Board of Alderman unanimously approved a motion to create an urban hunting season in the

town to help curb the booming deer population. The season only applies to bow hunting, but will give hunters a new window to hunt deer as long as they get permission to hunt from the land owner.

The board approved the motion after Christopher D. Kreh, a wildlife biologist for the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission, proposed the idea. He said that 10 other municipalities participated in the program during 2009, including Elkin and Middlesex, and that 45 deer were eliminated during Elkin’s first urban season. The 2009 urban bow season began on Saturday, Jan. 10, and runs until Saturday, Feb. 14, but Jefferson will not participate until the 2010 season as long as they register with the Wildlife Resources Commission by April 1.

The decision required two motions from the board: the first was to drop bow-and-arrows from the town’s weapons ordinance, so that hunters may use bows; the second motion was to file the appropriate paperwork with the Wildlife Resources Commission to participate in future bow urban seasons.

Members of Jefferson’s town government all said they thought it was a good idea.

“I think we need to do something to eliminate some of the deer population here in Jefferson someway,” said Jefferson Mayor Dana Tugman. “They’ve been a nuisance.”

Board member Mark Johnston said that “in Jefferson, we’re an old town. Everybody has apples trees, fruit trees or pear trees in their yard. So we had the food source for the deer – that’s why they showed up here.”

Johnston said he is not a hunter, but liked the idea because of the number of car accidents that are caused by deer in Jefferson.

“I live right in town and last year I buried three deer in my front yard that got run over,” said Johnston. He noted that he enjoys the deer that graze in his back yard each year, but that he would “just as soon somebody eat the meat as tearing up somebody’s car.”

Tugman and Johnston both felt it was a perfectly safe alternative to fight the deer population.

“All the deer hunters, all the guys I know who hunt with a bow, are the safest guys in the world,” said Johnston. “Basically, you’re bow hunting from a stand or a tree. It’s a down shot, so if you miss it’s in the ground. It’s a perfectly easy way to get by.”

Tugman said that he thinks “bow hunting will not be a danger to the public the way rifles or other weapons would be,” and that “bow hunters are a pretty special class of hunters. They’re very careful and probably respect the property more than some classes of hunters.

“Especially those that would be hunting during the colder part of the season up here,” continued Tugman. “You have to be a pretty tough fellow to put up with that.”

To find out more about the Urban Bow Season, click to www.ncwildlife.org. To find out more about the town of Jefferson, call (336) 846-9368.

http://www.mountaintimes.com/mtweekly/2009/0129/urban.php3

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Man shot to death by deer hunter in Pisgah forest

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: December 16, 2008
BREVARD— Prosecutors and police are considering whether to file charges against a deer hunter who killed a man in Pisgah National Forest.

Authorities told the Asheville Citizen-Times that 50-year-old Luciano Martinez was not hunting Saturday afternoon when he was shot with a rifle.

Transylvania County Sheriff David Mahoney says the shooter was a 21-year-old man deer hunting in a group. The sheriff would not release his name.

Mahoney says his investigators along with wildlife agents are talking to prosecutors about whether charges should be filed.

State Wildlife Resources Commission hunter education specialist Darrin Ball says eight people were killed in North Carolina while hunting last season, the highest total in nearly two decades.

Click here for the complete story

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Trout stocking delayed in Reddies river

The N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission has postponed the November delayed-harvest trout stocking for Reddies River in Wilkes County. The current water quality conditions in the river could hinder the survival of stocked fish, according to a commission news release.

The portion of Reddies River downstream of the city’s water supply reservoir was added to the commission’s Delayed Harvest Trout Waters Program in July 2008. The river was stocked with over 1,000 trout in October and additional trout stockings were scheduled for November, March, April and May.

In early October, North Wilkesboro informed the commission that the city would begin dredging operations in the reservoir upstream of the delayed-harvest section. The dredging has resulted in increased turbidity in the river to levels that could result in reduced survival of stocked trout.

The city of North Wilkesboro expects the dredging to take up to nine months to complete. Additional stockings planned for the delayed-harvest portion of Reddies River during 2009 may also be postponed. Fish stocking will resume once river conditions improve.  Continue Reading

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Carolina Outdoors Leasing and Management Q&A

Carolina Outdoors brings you an informative question and answer interview on leasing and management with our resident biologist Brian Chatham

Check it out Here-

http://www.carolinaoutdoors.org/lodge/read.php?15,225

Chevy Rando

NC Leftover Permit Hunt Opportunities!

http://www.bbc.net/karingforkaren/Images/Duck%20Hunting.jpgSome great leftover NC permit hunts are still out there! You aren’t too late! Whether you are after that trophy bruin, bruiser buck or coveted spot in the duck marsh to blast unsuspecting quackers .  They can be purchased through any licensed agent or by calling 1-888-248-6834.

Here they are with their numbers:
8515 - Pisgah Game Land-Bear
7032 -
Cape Fear Area Game Lands-Either-Sex Deer
7330 -
Goose Creek Game Land-Late Season Waterfowl
7112 -
Currituck National Wildlife Refuge-Late Season Waterfowl-Youth
7103 -
Currituck Sound-Late Season Waterfowl-Youth
8230 -
Upper Roanoke River Area-Either-Sex Deer
7060 -
Holly Shelter Game Land-Bear
7650 -
Lower Roanoke River Area-Either-Sex Deer
7412 - Johns River Game Land-Lower Creek Unit-Late Season Waterfowl
7111 -
Currituck National Wildlife Refuge-Snow Goose
8241 -
Upper Roanoke River Area-Late Season Waterfowl
7661 - Lower Roanoke River Area-Late Season Waterfowl
7413 -
Johns River Game Land-Lower Creek Unit-Late Season Waterfowl-Youth
8304 -
Butner-Falls of the Neuse Game Land-Late Season Waterfowl

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NC Proposed Hunting Regs Now Online for Public Comment

Let your voice be heard and help shape the future of NC Hunting by commenting on the new proposed regulations. There is a lot at stake this year! We at Carolina Outdoors want to encourage you to be sure an get on the NC Wildlife site and give them your take on the issues. If you don’t let them know how you feel, no one else will.

Here’s the link:
http://www.ncwildlife.org/ProposedRegulations/Main.aspx

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