Thursday, May 28, 2020

MAY 28, 2020 CONSERVATION & PROJECT 2020 FROM THE RABBIT HUNTER

The Premier Snowshoe Hare Conservation Organization in PA.
Conservation on the Allegheny.
Hunting the Adirondacks.



Direct from the pages of 

RABBIT HUNTER magazine

VOLUME 34, NO. 10




In cooperation with the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny
and presented here for the reading pleasure of the members of the Loyal Order,

With the authority of the author:

CONSERVATION ON THE ALLEGHENY

Written and Photographed
by
Joe Ewing
High HareMan
of the
Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny



For more than twenty years the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny has been the premier snowshoe hare conservation group on the Allegheny. Our members live to chase this magnificent lagomorph with beagles. We search for the elusive hare all winter long across the Allegheny High Plateau of Western Pennsylvania. We pursue them with beagles for the thrill of the chase. The Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny are the only private group concerned for the future of snowshoe hare in Pennsylvania.

It’s all about beagles and it’s all about snowshoe hare. We search for the elusive hare and when we find their lairs, the beagles test the hares and the hares test the beagles. We love the ringing howls, yips, bawls and squalls of beagles hot on the tail of a hare. Utah’s Mormon Tabernacle Choir cannot match the harmony of a pack of beagles. Chasing hare with beagles and allowing the hare to run free is tantamount to catch and release. Our members could never grasp a world without the thrill of the chase. We must conserve the few snowshoe hare we have left on the Allegheny. How do we accomplish this goal?

Many of our members are highly skilled at killing, but all are beaglers first and snowshoe hare hunters second with years of knowledge and experience. Many of our members are cottontail rabbit hunters and all know how to harvest when harvesting is needed or kill when killing is necessary; however, our members have seen the light on hare. Although “hunting” is in our name we do not hunt to kill snowshoe hares on the Allegheny Plateau. Our elite members understand we can’t kill every last hare or the beagles will have nothing to chase and our state and our planet will be a lessor place to live. It’s about the ecosystem.

We began the search to find hare as hunters so we call ourselves “hunters”. We could’ve called ourselves the “Snowshoe Hare Society”, “Hare Federation”, “Snowshoe Hares Unlimited” or even “The Snowshoe Hare Foundation”. We search and we hunt for that supreme hare cover and when we are lucky enough to find the elusive hare, we stand back and listen to the beautiful beagle music as it rings and echoes across the Allegheny.


FACE MASKS
Way back in June of 2018 I penned an article for this magazine listing the noble uses of the age-old and reliable handkerchief. I never dreamed my old standby, my handkerchief, would become a lifesaving item. I’m sure glad I had a COVID-19 face mask in my pocket all this time. Little did I know. --HH

For more than two decades the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny have understood the snowshoe hare must be protected on the Allegheny. We believe snowshoe hare and cottontail rabbit habitats must be maintained and restored by enhancing the ecosystem and protecting biological diversity. Study alone cannot protect the snowshoe hare from extinction. We must act before this rare and magnificent game animal is lost from the Allegheny forever. As we begin the 21st century, the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny and all sportsmen stand at the crossroads. The crossroads of doing everything possible to protect the species or witnessing the snowshoe hare’s total disappearance on the Allegheny.

How did the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny start the journey of conservation of the snowshoe hare? Many years ago, members agreed killing snowshoe hare was far too simple. Snowshoe hare cover became increasingly scarce and hare harder to find. Besides, we enjoyed the ultimate advantage of the most sophisticated killing machines known to man, the relentless beagle hound.

The use of Thompson® Contender® .410 handguns could not level the playing field. The “one-hour-time-limit” was established to allow the beagles to sing their music behind the hare for an hour before the hunters attempted a kill on the hare. In front of a pack of beagles the rule made little difference. Watching the hounds run hares for hours with invited hunters, shooting, missing and sooner or later killing a hare, the “two-hour-time-limit” and the “one-miss-rule” were initiated. Our development on the road to conservation of the magnificent snowshoe hare on the Allegheny was begun. Today, we never take a bead on a snowshoe hare on the Allegheny, but that doesn’t diminish our passion for snowshoe hare hunting.

What are the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny conservation goals? Our objectives are: protect the snowshoe hare species from extinction by maintaining and restoring habitats, enhance the ecosystem by improving and developing hare and rabbit cover which interacts and also improves the environment for all fauna and flora including humankind and strive to protect from increased loss and improve the variety of native plants and animals in our environment.



Are we “conservationists”?

We buy a hunting license and we pay federal Pittman-Robertson excise tax on sporting goods, but if this is all we do can we call ourselves conservationist? If we throw empty beer cans out the truck window on our way home from hunting, I know we do, are we protecting the environment? We see the “Adopt A Highway” sign so we know someone else will pick up our empties or worse, we don’t care.

Are we protecting wildlife when we take that one extra game animal over the limit? We shoot an animal and end up throwing it over the bank at the parking lot. I know this happens because my beagles find all things dead. We don’t know what to do with it or have no use for wild game, so we waste it.

We start hunting before the legal starting time and push the legal quitting time, no one will know, there are no referees on the field calling penalties, but are we being ethical? Can we call ourselves conservationists when we enter a hare, rabbit, or grouse cover and shoot as many animals as we can kill with total disregard for how many animals may be located in that cover? Are we even sportsmen? How about our conscience? Is it our guide?

Am I confused? Do I have conservation, sportsmanship and ethics mixed up?  Do all three terms interconnect at some point? When we witness our friends and hunting partners squandering natural resources, disregarding ethics and sportsmanship and abusing the rights we’ve worked so hard to earn and protect, do we take a stand? We know, as sportsmen and women, we do not police our own ranks. It’s vitally important, we adopt self-regulation and self-control to maintain the species we love to hunt.

Can the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny truly call ourselves conservationist? For far too long, like everyone, we’ve advocated for the protection and preservation of the environment and wildlife. We’ve supported, backed, promoted and sponsored other groups’ causes. We’ve let other groups do our bidding. We’ve left others holding the bag. We’ve been indecisive and we’ve procrastinated. We’ve blown smoke and hot air to the point of nausea. We’ve talked enough. It’s time for action.  

Time is growing short for snowshoe hare. Like the unnamed man said, “let’s do something, even if it’s wrong.” The Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny are doing something. We are taking action. We’ve taken up the cause. We are embroiled in combat. It is time for battle.

We pray we never lose our love for the great outdoors and the honorable sport of beagling. We pray the heritage passed down from our forebears can be passed on to our grandchildren. Our hope is our youth can find the joy we have enjoyed in their endeavors in the great outdoors whatever their choices might be.

Or email us @: bigwoodsharehunters@gmail.com




From the quarantined headquarters of the
Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny:

 “PROJECT 2020”
 Written and photographed
by
Joe Ewing
High HareMan
Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny

Sign post placing 2019.

Forest County, PA -- The Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny take pride in announcing a new habitat project on the Allegheny. In cooperation with Seneca Resources, a National Fuel Gas Company, the conservation minded hare hunters are conducting a habitat reclamation project to improve nesting and escape cover for eastern cottontail rabbits, ruffed grouse, pheasants, song birds and all small animals on land owned by Seneca Resources in Forest County, Pennsylvania. The project includes hinge-cutting fire cherry, black birch, quaking aspen and other nondescript trees, creating brush piles, mitigation of invasive species and planting native trees and shrubs. The hare hunters wish to express our deepest appreciation to Seneca Resources Company for their exceptional and continuing cooperation, guidance and expertise in the successful launching of this project.    

In the fall of 2019 after considerable consideration, discussion and with a certain amount of trepidation the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny acknowledged it was time to quit delaying, procrastinating and stalling and take action on conservation and biodiversity by creating habitat for cottontail rabbits, ruffed grouse, woodcock, song birds and other small animals.

 
The sign signifying the project before work began.


Hinge cutting in the project.



Our goals are to make great animal habitat where habitat formerly existed and to improve the biodiversity of the area. Our desire would be to have these animals propagate, thrive and move on to become game animals. If no one hunted on this property it would be our wish, but of course, it is not our land and we fully understand the landowner can do as they wish.
The project area in 2012.
The project area March 2020.



Ruffed grouse are found in the proposed project area which was a major consideration in choosing the site. A headline in the Pennsylvania Outdoor News reads “Grouse are in big trouble in Pa.” (Ironically, the grouse article appeared on the same page as the blurb announcing our project). The article went on, “Ruffed grouse is in trouble in Pennsylvania and other nearby states in its native range. The decline continues to grow in Pennsylvania and biologists point to two main causes: widespread loss of young forest habitat and deaths from the mosquito-borne West Nile virus.”

The Pennsylvania Game Commission estimates the state has lost 20-30% of its grouse population in the last four years. The Ruffed Grouse Society thinks grouse may well be on their way to endangered status nationwide unless there is a concentrated effort to protect and expand their habitat.


Permethrin
Update
In the March 2020 issue of this magazine I listed the virtues of using permethrin in my beagles. I presented my theory of buying a larger size package and cutting the dose in half, thus getting two doses for the same price as one. My contention being if a dose was 1.5ml I could buy a package containing 3.0ml thus buying two doses.

I’ve now found I can buy a package containing 6.0ml for giant dogs which is 4 doses for the same price as 1 dose for my dog. This brings the price per dose down to around $.34 per dose. Even if I spill some on the floor this is still very cheap. Just like me. -H.H

Ruffed Grouse in the project area.



Many words have been written by others repeating the needs of the eastern cottontail rabbit and ruffed grouse. A word used for both cottontail and hare is “fragmentation”. Words we read over and over are; “young forest habitat”, “rejuvenating forests” and “successional forests”. Whatever we call our forests they must meet the challenge of providing food and cover for wildlife along with our “concentrated effort to protect and expand their habitat”. We can break it all down to a few words; food, escape and nesting cover.

Providing habitat on private land, even posted land, makes perfect sense to the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny. More than 1400 species have been listed as “threatened” or “endangered” since the Endangered Species Act of 1973 was written. Threatened species are those at risk of becoming endangered in the near term and endangered is species at risk for becoming extinct in the foreseeable future.

“Roughly half of these species find 80 percent or more of their habitat on private land. This reality along with the fact 60 percent of the land in the United States is privately owned, makes private landowners critical partners in the nation’s efforts to recover species on the brink of extinction.”—Catherine E. Spencer, research fellow with the Property and Environment Research Center (PERC) in American Hunter magazine, November 2019 issue.

In Pennsylvania 12 million acres of forest land is under private ownership. In May of 2004, the Pennsylvania Game Commission (PGC) created a Private Landowner Assistance Program and hired a Regional Wildlife Diversity Biologist to facilitate the program and aid interested landowners in developing habitat management plans in each of the state's six geographic regions. A team of PGC biologists assists private landowners in making their property more attractive for wildlife, particularly species of greatest conservation need. It does not matter if the land is open to hunting. Wherever we make habitat we must do everything in our power to improve the ecosystem and the biodiversity of our forests.

I will keep readers of this magazine up to date on “Project 2020” in future issues showing the progress. On more than one day several volunteer members were hard at work cutting trees and making brush piles. I will feature these members in a future article. It will be interesting to see before and after pictures. The project area is greening up and the song birds and rabbits love the food and cover.

Matt (R) and Mark (C) receive commemorative copy of The Rabbit Hunter magazine from the High HareMan. Both were featured on the cover for their snowshoe hare hunting prowess in the mountains of New York State.



Or email us @: bigwoodsharehunters@gmail.com with questions and comments.


Friday, May 8, 2020

MAY 6, 2020 MORE ON "PROJECT 2020".


The premier snowshoe hare conservation group in PA.

Searching the ANF for the elusive snowshoe hare.















Hunting the Mountains of the Adirondack.


From the quarantined headquarters of the
Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny:



“PROJECT 2020”

by
Joe Ewing
High HareMan
Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny


In March 2020 The Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny announced a new habitat project on the Allegheny. In cooperation with Seneca Resources, a National Fuel Gas Company, the conservation minded hare hunters started an ongoing habitat reclamation project to improve nesting and escape cover for eastern cottontail rabbits, ruffed grouse, pheasants, song birds and all small animals on land owned by Seneca Resources in Forest County, Pennsylvania.

The project includes hinge-cutting  of fire cherry, black birch, quaking aspen and other nondescript trees, creating brush piles, mitigation of invasive species and planting native trees and shrubs. The hare hunters wish to express our deepest appreciation to Seneca Resources Company for their exceptional and continuing cooperation, guidance and expertise in the successful launching of this project. And, to Mr. Erick Byers, Company Land Forester, for his guidance and expertise.    


In the fall of 2019 after considerable consideration, discussion and with a certain amount of trepidation the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny acknowledged it was time to quit delaying, procrastinating and stalling and take action on conservation and biodiversity by creating habitat for cottontail rabbits, ruffed grouse, woodcock, song birds and other small animals.


There was no debate as to where we should execute our project. The members consciously determined we should do this on private land. We would strive to obtain permission for the project on land where we have been training beagles for the last decade. The site is a 600-acre tract of successional  forest repopulated with fire cherry, black birch and other worthless trees. The trees are growing quickly providing less cover for wildlife and more shading of the undergrowth. Cottontail rabbits, ruffed grouse, wild turkey, song birds and occasionally an itinerant pheasant can be found on the property along with the usual predators. Maintaining food and escape cover and providing nesting cover for these animals became our goal. Snowshoe hare have been found within five miles of the project site but have not been observed in this locality.
 
January 2020

After accomplishing all formalities which included meeting with the landowner’s forester, Erick Byers, we received permission from the land owner and “Project 2020” was launched. So that passing workers and visitors to the area would know what we were doing, a modest sign announcing our intentions was placed at the project site. Work commenced in January and intensive cutting began. In April our Public Relations Officer transmitted a news release to over a hundred media outlets announcing the project and our progress.

Matt Baker, January 2020

Our goals are to make great animal habitat where habitat formerly existed and to improve the biodiversity of the area. Our desire would be to have these animals propagate, thrive and move on to become game animals. If no one hunted on this property it would be our desire, but of course, it is not our land and we fully understand the landowner can do as they wish. 

Ruffed grouse are found in the proposed project area which was a major consideration in choosing the site. A headline in the Pennsylvania Outdoor News reads “Grouse are in big trouble in Pa.” (Ironically, the grouse article appeared on the same page as the blurb announcing our project). The article went on, “Ruffed grouse is in trouble in Pennsylvania and other nearby states in its native range. The decline continues to grow in Pennsylvania and biologists point to two main causes: widespread loss of young forest habitat and deaths from the mosquito-borne West Nile virus.”

The Pennsylvania Game Commission estimates the state has lost 20-30% of its grouse population in the last four years. The Ruffed Grouse Society thinks grouse may well be on their way to endangered status nationwide unless there is a concentrated effort to protect and expand their habitat.


Many words have been written by others repeating the needs of the eastern cottontail rabbit and ruffed grouse. A word used for both cottontail and hare is “fragmentation”. Words we read over and over are; “young forest habitat”, “rejuvenating forests” and “successional forests”. Whatever we call our forests they must meet the challenge of providing food and cover for wildlife along with our “concentrated effort to protect and expand their habitat”. We can break it all down to a few words; food, escape and nesting cover.

Providing habitat on private land, even posted land, makes perfect sense to the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny. More than 1400 species have been listed as “threatened” or “endangered” since the Endangered Species Act of 1973 was written. Threatened species are those at risk of becoming endangered in the near term and endangered is species at risk for becoming extinct in the foreseeable future. “Roughly half of these species find 80 percent or more of their habitat on private land. This reality along with the fact 60 percent of the land in the United States is privately owned, makes private landowners critical partners in the nation’s efforts to recover species on the brink of extinction.”—Catherine E. Spencer, research fellow with the Property and Environment Research Center (PERC) in American Hunter magazine, November 2019 issue.

In Pennsylvania 12 million acres of forest land is under private ownership. In May of 2004, the Pennsylvania Game Commission (PGC) created a Private Landowner Assistance Program and hired a Regional Wildlife Diversity Biologist to facilitate the program and aid interested landowners in developing habitat management plans in each of the state's six geographic regions. A team of PGC biologists assists private landowners in making their property more attractive for wildlife, particularly species of greatest conservation need. It does not matter if the land is open to hunting. Wherever we make habitat we must do everything in our power to improve the ecosystem and the biodiversity of our forests.



I will keep readers of this blog up to date on “Project 2020” in future issues showing the progress. On more than one day several volunteer members were hard at work cutting trees and making brush piles. I will feature these members in a future blogs. It will be interesting to see before and after pictures. The project area is greening up and the song birds and rabbits love the food and cover.
































Sunday, April 12, 2020

EPIC ON THE ALLEGHENY email us @: bigwoodsharehunters@gmail.com


THE FOLLOWING ARTICLE WAS PUBLISHED IN THE APRIL 2020 ISSUE OF


The article is presented here for your reading enjoyment with the added feature of color pictures.

The article is posted here with the authority of the author. 



From the World Headquarters of the
Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny.

EPIC ON THE ALLEGHENY


Written and Photographed
By
Joe Ewing
High HareMan
Of the
Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny

 Snowshoe hare in the laurel patch listens for the hounds.

The hounds have turned. I hear them coming over the mountain with the ringing howls of Geronimo and Sidney. The beagles are singing together like a finely tuned duet. I hear them in the distance with their voices ringing and echoing off the snow-clad Allegheny. There has never been a finer song written and the melodies cannot be duplicated.

The hounds of the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny are at it again. The pack of hare hounds are in the remote forests of Pennsylvania on a beautiful winter day in February and it’s that time of year we affectionately call the “extreme season”. The seven members of the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny standing on this mountain side live for chasing snowshoe hare with beagles.

There can be no greater time of year to chase hare. The “extreme season” is a true hare hunter’s dream time of year. February weather is punishing on the Allegheny and the conditions separate the men from the boys and hare hounds from lap dogs. The regular Pennsylvania hare season ended weeks ago but the wily snowshoe hare seldom fails to give the hare hounds a run for their money. If everything works out the hounds will be tested for hours on end. No namby-pamby or wishy-washy beagles need apply. It’s all about the dogs.

Mark and Roy were the first to “Tally-Ho” this snowshoe hare as it raced across the forest service road at full speed with the pack of beagles hot on its trail. The hare made a 300-yard circle through parts of the National Forest, across the ridge and back across the forest road, almost faster than I can write this, when a mysterious call came over the two-way.

“They’re backtracking,” Mark proclaimed in his signature ruff and gruff tone of voice.

Matt, Mark’s son, who was standing beside me, looked at me and I at him. I don’t know what kind of expression I had on my face but Matt’s look was one of pure astonishment.

“If my dogs are backtracking that hard, I’m going to kill them,” I exclaimed in a non-serious metaphorical tone of voice as they continued to pound the track back onto posted property. Later, Mark acknowledged the hare was laying scent over scent and neither Roy nor he saw the hare’s return trip.



Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny members Ray Wolford (L) and Bill Moreland commence early morning preparations prior to the opening bell of the 2006 PA snowshoe hare season.


Snowshoe hare are infamous for the tricks they play in an attempt to confuse the hounds. The hare’s large fur covered 5 1/2-inch back feet allow them to run at speeds of 30 or more miles per hour and turn 180 degrees at full speed in deep snow. They regularly lay new tracks over old, repeating this antic time and time again. A snowshoe hare can jump 15 feet or more in a single bound, leaving a great expanse of scentless snow to greet the beagle’s keen nose. They inevitably hop out of the track, hunker down, and giggle as the hounds race past at full cry.

The most classic hare trick I ever witnessed was captured on video by my good friend and board member of the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny, Bill Moreland, as the hare calmly laid on a log as the hounds continued their search within 10 feet of the hare. I know this to be true because I’ve seen it. I’ve witnessed these tricks and I’ve heard the hare snickering hundreds, maybe thousands, of times over my hare hunting career.

Picture complements of Bill Moreland VHH
A still taken from Bill’s classic video of Mr. Hare laying on a log watching the hounds race by.

This morning the hounds scrambled off the tailgate, immediately found a fresh track and were screaming at full cry almost instantly. The elusive snowshoe hare took the expected course circling through the laurel patch and headed for more open woods where he could make time and run with ease. A fresh inch of snow overnight and temperatures of +28 degrees made the conditions perfect for both hound and hunter.


Inside the laurel patch.

After crossing back over the forest road, the hare made one wide swing through the laurel swamp and then took off for higher ground and parts unknown. It didn’t take long for the chorus of barks, yips, bawling chops and ringing howls to go silent. The mountain air became deathly quiet. The radio signals from the hounds’ GPS collars showed nothing but question marks which denoted the beagles were out of radio contact with the Garmin® Alpha®.

The Alpha® 100 withTT-15 dog collar just might be the best thing to come along for houndsmen since the beagle itself and it all functions magnificently under optimum conditions. It has saved me countless miles on both shoe leather and truck tires. However, conditions are not always optimal. The Allegheny Plateau is made up of deep valleys worn by ancient mountain streams which prevent the dog collars from communicating with the hand-held on many occasions.

A few minutes passed with no signal coming from the hounds. It was apparent by looking at the topo map on the Alpha’s screen the dogs were on the other side of the mountain in steep terrain. They’d vanished at the 8-tenths of a mile mark. Matt was getting noticeably more nervous and anxious by the minute.

There are two approaches to the situation. My favorite being to relax and patiently wait for the beagles to return. The hare may bring the hounds back over the mountain or if the hounds lose the hare track, they should follow their own scent back if they have any brains. The wait had begun.

Pennsylvania's principal land cover is forest. These forests cover nearly 16.5 million acres or 59% of the state. Much of this land comprises some of the most remote forestland in the eastern US. The “Wilds of Pennsylvania” is some of that remote land and encompasses more public land than all of Yellowstone National Park.

The licensed hunters of Pennsylvania are the owners of 1.5 million acres of State Game Lands (SGL). The SGLs are overseen and protected by the Pennsylvania Game Commission (PGC) but there is more.

Pennsylvanians own 2.2 million acres of state forest land and 121 state parks. The Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) maintains, protects and oversees this land and parks which are open for all kinds of leisure time activities.

The citizens of the United States own another 513,175 acres on the Allegheny Plateau. The Allegheny National Forest (ANF) is managed by the U.S. Forest Service and every acre is open for hunting.

Collins Pine Company owns 175 separate tracts totaling 126,000 acres on the Allegheny and hunting, fishing and camping are allowed on every acre the company owns.

Today we are chasing hare on privately owned land. Twelve million acres of forestland is under private ownership in Pennsylvania. Penn State University conducted a survey some years back in which they found 70-percent of private landowners will allow hunting when asked. We always remember we are guests of the landowner.


Public land behind this sign.
Private land behind this sign.


Minutes passed without a smidgeon of signal from the hounds with Matt becoming more anxious by the second.

“I can’t leave my dogs in the woods,” Matt anxiously exclaimed. It was only 10:00 o’clock in the morning.

The second approach to the problem is head for higher ground in the direction of the dogs in hopes of regaining a signal. It was then Matt suddenly disappeared. The Alpha also tracks hunting buddies and just as suddenly as he disappeared Matt was 900-yards down the road. Upon his return I asked where he went so suddenly, he replied, “I had to find a road to retrieve my beagles.”

“There aint no roads,” my only comeback. “If the dogs aint back by dark we’ll look for ‘em then,” which was what Matt didn’t want to hear.

By this time the hunters were gathered around the trucks chitchatting and joking but mainly putting forth theories as to what the heck the hounds were doing. Very unfrequently I would receive a signal from one hound or the other and it seemed they were not moving. Time and the hounds seemed to stand still.

Just as suddenly as Sammie had disappeared, she reappeared on the screen at 600-yards. She was making her way back toward us but she wasn’t tonguing. Sammie had quit the chase and was on her way back.

Within minutes Sidney and Music appeared on my screen and Matt reported he was in contact with his beagles. Soon afterward, Kaz reported his beagles were returning.

I, assuming Sidney and Music were quitting the chase, reached for my horn and let out the best blast I could muster, once, twice maybe three times.
The author, deep in snowshoe hare cover on the Allegheny.

Wait, do I hear the hounds? I can hear beagle voices off in the distance ever so faintly. Gradually the beagle harmonies become louder and more distinct. It’s definitely loud-mouthed Sidney and Matt’s Mo with an occasional Music and Poco voice thrown into the mix. Soon, the pack is racing through the laurel patch triumphantly singing their tune.

Over the next hour or two, beagles are picked up and leashed one at a time by whomever can grab one or two. I leashed one or two beagles and headed for the trucks.

Sidney was the last hound still out and still in high speed pursuit of the long running snowshoe hare. He was across the forest service road running on ANF land 300-yards to the south. I, for some unknown impulsive reason, jumped into my truck and took off in pursuit of Sidney. I found an oil company lease road leading toward the hound. When I stopped the truck, climbed out and listened, Sidney was coming closer. He passed within 56-feet of me but he wasn’t about to quit. I pushed the tone button on the Alpha knowing he wouldn’t heed the tone and off he went still locked on to the hare.

As I returned to the staging area six hunters were lined up on the forest road practically shoulder to shoulder. One hunter had spotted the snowshoe hare as it crossed the road once more. I exited my pickup and joined the blockade. Sidney was coming closer and closer. When Sid saw the group, he turned away, he was in no mood to give up. He’d only just begun to run. When he heard my voice, he surprisingly came to me. Soon all hounds were loaded in their boxes.

I’ve hunted these old hills for years. More years than I want to say. I remember every chase and wouldn’t it be great to have many more hare chases like todays to remember.


Before the hunt 8 hunters enjoyed a hunters’ breakfast at the famous Kelly Hotel in downtown Marienville, PA.