presents
From the World
Headquarters
of the
Big Woods Hare
Hunters of the Allegheny
TROUBLE IN PARADISE
Written and
Photographed
by
Joe Ewing
High HareMan
Of the
Big Woods Hare
Hunters of the Allegheny
This article was first printed in the
July 2019 issues of
american beagler
magazine
and the
THE RABBIT HUNTER
magazine
and the
October 2019 issue
of the
HOUNDS and HUNTING
magazine.
The article is reprinted here for your reading pleasure and is authorized by the author.
My favorite subject is the
very elusive, exceptionally majestic, and extremely omnipotent snowshoe hare. My
favorite activity involves beagles and beagling. Combine the two hares and
beagles, and I’ve discovered my pastime. Place my pastime in my most beloved
place on Earth, and I have realized my passion. Chasing snowshoe hare in the
dead of winter on the Allegheny while listening to the hounds in full cry with
their glorious music ringing from mountainside to mountainside is an activity I
challenge anyone to beat. Pursuing the elusive snowshoe hare with beagles on
the Allegheny has bestowed upon me untold hours of extreme enjoyment, absolute pleasure, and unlimited adventure.
My mission is to inform as
many people as possible of the sheer magnificence of the snowshoe hare (Lepus
americanus). I describe the snowshoe hare as “magnificent” because they are
impressively beautiful and spectacularly difficult to hunt. I call the hare “elusive”
because they are extremely difficult to find in Pennsylvania and unquestionably
evasive. Being both unconquerable and invincible, the snowshoe hare can only be
described as “omnipotent”.
There is trouble
in paradise. Hard times for the magnificent snowshoe hare and other small game
animals like ruffed grouse and eastern cottontail rabbits are here, now, on the
Allegheny, and no one is doing anything about it. In 2012, after hearing from a
few hunting-incapacitated and game-disabled road-hunters unable to locate the
elusive hare, the Pennsylvania Game Commission (PGC) excessively dramatized the
situation by reducing the hunting season to three days and by restricting the
hunting in three wildlife management units (WMU) located in the Poconos.
In
a feeble attempt to get a supposed handle on the hare population problem across
the state, the PGC hired a snowshoe hare biologist along with experts
(students) from Penn State University (PSU). The results of the two-year-long
study; "…the
loss of acceptable habitat, from development and forest maturation and
fragmentation has been plaguing hares for decades. Where good habitat can be
found in their range, you'll find hares.", said Calvin DuBrock,
director of the PGC’s Bureau of Wildlife Management. The most revealing words
in DuBrock’s statement were “forest maturation and fragmentation.”
Veteran
deep-woods Pennsylvania snowshoe hare hunters instinctively understood the problems
without studies, biologists, or doctoral students. The study made not one
smidgeon of a mention of the threat or damage from the overpopulation of whitetail
deer. The solution from the PGC was to “manage” the problem. The hare season is
back where it was before 2012, the snowshoe hare biologists are long gone, the doctoral
students have moved along to more pressing matters, and the snowshoe hare and
other small game species are on their own.
Sometimes
called the snowshoe rabbit or varying hare, the hare is one of Pennsylvania’s
rarest and most elusive game animals. Ninety-nine percent of Pennsylvania’s
population has never seen a hare in the wild. Many of the
population have never heard the term “snowshoe hare” and don’t know this
splendid animal even exists. The Allegheny National Forest (ANF) Headquarters
in Marienville, PA, thoughtlessly or purposely neglects to include the snowshoe
hare in their display of mounted animals native to the ANF.
Pennsylvania is at the
southernmost fringe of the hare’s range. Snowshoe hares are predominantly found in parts of the Allegheny
Mountains, the high plateaus of the northwest, the Pocono Mountains to the east, and, yes, the Allegheny National Forest. Snowshoe hares thrive
in the high plateau swamps, clear-cuts, evergreen plantations, and laurel
bottoms of the Allegheny High Plateau, where the snowpack persists throughout
the winter.
Snowshoe hares are boundless in awesomeness although
small in size, standing about 8 or 9 inches at the shoulder, weighing in at 3 to
5 pounds, and around 21 inches in length. At 5 inches, the hare’s
hind feet are incredibly huge in comparison to their overall size.
The hind feet are covered with thick hair allowing the snowshoe hare to attain
speeds of up to 30 miles an hour (40 feet per second) even in deep snow, stop
on a dime, and turn 90 degrees in midair. Snowshoe hares will run for hours in
front of a pack of beagles. The varying hare knows there is no dog alive he
can’t outrun.
Hunting snowshoe hare on
the Allegheny is a far cry from hunting hare in most other places in North
America. Maine is blessed with huge numbers of hare covers virtually impenetrable
by man or hound, which explains why snowshoe hare are numerous in the state. Hare
hunting on the Allegheny is more like big game hunting and a far cry from
Maine’s hare populations. On the Allegheny, the cover is sparse, and the hare is
few. The hunter seldom finds more than a few hares in any cover. I’ve
personally discovered when a cover is shot out, the area may never repopulate.
The snowshoe
hare’s name comes from their large, 5½ inch hind feet which keeps them “afloat” in the
deepest of snow.
A little history. Pennsylvania's forests were completely obliterated in the late 19th century and early 20th century. The forests were
completely destroyed. Not a twig was left standing. However, the ground was
filled with millions upon millions of dormant seeds, ready to sprout. As the
forests began naturally regenerating, the thick brush was exactly what the
snowshoe hare needed for nesting and escape cover. The hare, as well as other
wildlife populations, boomed.
Credit: Courtesy Pennsylvania State Archives
The
"Pennsylvania Desert," Tioga County, PA, circa 1920
White-tailed deer emerged as one of the greatest threats to Pennsylvania’s forests in the twentieth century. Pennsylvania’s deer population exploded, devastating the
state’s forests. Escape cover, nesting cover, and food sources became severely limited
for the snowshoe hare as well as ruffed grouse, woodcock, cottontail, turkey, and many non-game species, including songbirds.
My story: In
the 1980s and 1990s, my beagling buddies and I hunted for and shamefully killed what
few snowshoes hare we could find in the sizable clear-cuts and mature spruce
plantations the CCC and WPA boys planted during the 1920s and 1930s. The
National Forest and state forest were erecting fenced deer exclosures to protect
vegetation from deer browsing. We were confident a hare would be inside when we spotted a wire fence. The many hares we ran inside the fences would play with
the hounds by exiting the wire, running a few yards, and then entering back through the
fence, impeding the hounds with every exit and entrance. Regularly, I was compelled
to increase the size of the holes in the wire so the beagles could reenter. Our
desire to kill this awe-inspiring, beagle-challenging little animals seemed to wane. Chasing these awesome running creatures with beagles became more challenging than killing them.
In the 1980s, the public
fell in love with big trees, and “clear-cutting” became a dirty word. The Pennsylvania
Department of Forest and Waters and the U.S. Forest Service stopped cutting trees on
public land primarily due to pressure from well-funded, well-organized
environmental groups. Contrary to proven science and common sense, these
“environmentalists” believed they were helping out wildlife. Well-funded
environmental groups tied the U. S. Forest Service up in court for almost ten
years. Hardly a tree was harvested in the ANF during that period. As the forests matured, the forest
floor became barren wastelands. The forest floor was devoid of green vegetation
small animals needed for survival. The very animals the well-intentioned public
wanted to protect vanished.
On the evening of May 31,
1985, multiple violent and deadly F4 tornados raged through eastern Ohio,
western Pennsylvania into Canada. Nearly one mile wide, one tornado tore through
the Allegheny National Forest. Millions of board feet of timber were flattened
in the Marienville ranger district alone. The tornado ripped a path of total
devastation 29 miles long.
In the years following this
natural disturbance, the tornado’s path began to heal itself and regenerate
naturally. The natural reforestation created many great snowshoe hare covers.
For the next twenty years, nature gave adequate nesting and escape cover for
countless small creatures, including snowshoe hare. Then we started chasing the elusive snowshoe hare with beagles all winter.
Today, the ANF
has chosen selective cutting over clear-cutting. Natural disturbances like fire
and wind cannot be depended upon to create hare habitats. The debate between foresters and
conservationists rages on, resulting in over-maturing forests and forest
mismanagement. Too many deer competing for the same food as snowshoe hare,
cottontail rabbits, and ruffed grouse have combined to restrict the small game
population. Snowshoe hare hang in covers long past their prime. Relatively few
new covers are being made, and snowshoe hare are picky.
In the March 2018 issue of
the Pennsylvania Game News (PGN), the
official publication of the PGC, an article titled “Too Much Old Forest” with the
subtitle reading, “The future of hunting is rooted in younger forestland” was
presented. The sub-subtitle reads, “Many hunters find comfort and familiarity
in older stands of Penn’s Woods. But they’d likely find more deer [it’s all
about deer in PA] and opportunities in younger forests that provide more cover
and varied foods. The canopy and ferns of older stands limit understory development
and opportunities for wildlife. But the Game Commission and its partners are
working to provide wildlife a better mix of forest age classes.”
The article openly admitted
the PGC has been mismanaging commission-owned forests for a long time. In a
prior article, Kosack (writer of the PGN article) acknowledged the PGC has been more interested in timber
production than wildlife, a very interesting statement from the organization
mandated to protect our wildlife. The title of the article said it all with
nothing more to be articulated. If the article was genuine it was good news for
snowshoe hare and other small game.
In the opinion of
the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny, the majestic snowshoe hare and all
small wildlife should be granted more respect from our state and national wildlife
officials. Snowshoe hare and other small game, like ruffed grouse, wild turkey,
rabbits, and non-game species, are entitled to a higher standing than they
presently enjoy. We understand deer is king; however, it will be a sad day when
the forests are completely void of all small creatures.
The bottom line: snowshoe hare and all small game numbers go up when trees go down. Our
public forest lands are in desperate need of improved management. More trees
need cut. Selective cutting does not work. Trees are a crop that requires
harvesting. Clear-cutting small patches of timber every few years creates a
mixed-age forest, just what the snowshoe need. We must let our public officials
know what we expect and what the snowshoe hare and other small game animals
need and deserve. It’s time we get serious about small game. Enough said?
Hardly. The Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny have only just begun.
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Private
timber companies clear-cut hundreds of acres of forest every year. But is it
enough?
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Fresh
clear-cut in the summer of 2015
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Same
clear-cut as above in the summer of 2017.
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Hunting in a
clear-cut on the high plateau.
John Griffith commented on Facebook.com-- I just wanted to say that I just read your article in the July issue of Rabbit Hunter magazine. I must say that it was a great article! I am 31 years old and enjoy hunting for snowshoe hares as well as ruffed grouse. I fear that hunting for these majestic creatures could become a thing of the past, if our game commission does not change its philosophy. For far too long our forests have been managed for dollars instead of animals. If our game commission gave half the time and money that they have devoted to deer and elk we would be in a much better position. I applaud you for speaking the truth and I agree with your mind set 100%. It was refreshing to read
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