Wednesday, September 30, 2020
CAPTAIN JIM "KAZ" KAZMAREK FEATURED ON THE COVER OF THE RABBIT HUNTER.
Tuesday, September 8, 2020
MEMBERSHIP LETTER 08-01-2020
The following article was published in the September issue of THE RABBIT HUNTER magazine and is presented here for your reading pleasure.
The main objective of the Big Woods Hare Hunters of
the Allegheny has been and always will be beagling. It will always be about the
beagles first and it will always be about the snowshoe hare. Over these many
years and a generation we’ve discovered we can achieve our great ambitions which
is to promote beagling and preserve the magnificent snowshoe hare.
The preeminent season of all time for the Big Woods
Hare Hunters of the Allegheny was the 2019-2020 season. We enjoyed many outstanding
hare chases with some outstanding beagles and beaglers and we conducted colossal
and historic business at the same time.
We welcomed and inducted several exceptional sportsmen
and women into the Loyal Order, we kicked off a bold new conservation campaign,
helped some worthy veterans, sponsored young hunters and shooters and dedicated
ourselves to be bigger and better than ourselves for the future.


Several new members were inducted into the Loyal Order. In no specific order they were: Mr. Matthew Baker, Lucinda, PA., Ms. Mary Hosmer, Ridgway, PA., Mr. John Zimmerman, Cranberry, PA., Mr. Roy Towner, Lucinda, PA., Mr. Jaret Zimmerman, Cranberry, PA. and Mr. Mark Baker, Cranberry, PA. We welcome these new members and are confident they will continue their conservationist spirit of the magnificent snowshoe hare.
We understand snowshoe hare,
ruffed grouse, woodcock and many other species of small animals are in jeopardy
and must be protected from extinction on the Allegheny. We believe hare, rabbit
and grouse habitats must be maintained and restored. Study alone cannot protect
the snowshoe hare. Action is needed before these magnificent game animals are lost
from the Allegheny forever. As we begin the 21st century, the Big Woods Hare
Hunters of the Allegheny stand at the junction of doing everything possible to
protect the species or stand idly by and be witness to the total disappearance
of snowshoe hare, ruffed grouse and other species from the High Plateau. As the
premier snowshoe hare conservation organization, we stand ready. Will climate
change work against the snowshoe hare? Can snowshoe hare survive global
warming? Can humankind survive? The
answer is YES but the time has come to do something. We cannot stand idly in
the briar patch. The Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny is doing something
impressive. We are taking action. We’ve taken up the cause. We are embroiled in
combat. It is time for battle.
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| 2020 PROJECT AREA |
In November
of 2019 a bold and courageous conservation project was launched on the
Allegheny. The objective of the project, which was designated “The 2020
Project”, was to create nesting and escape cover for cottontail rabbits, ruffed
grouse and other small animals. The goal: to duplicate as nearly as possible a
naturally occurring forest disturbance. Several dedicated members worked
tirelessly for several days to create nearly five acres of improved habitat. A
very sincere “thank you” to those loyal members who dedicated so much of their
time for the benefit of so many species of animals.
Is it time to
reduce the bag limits on snowshoe hare on the Allegheny and in Pennsylvania?
Should the hare season be refined, moved or both? Should we lobby the
Pennsylvania Game Commission to make necessary corrections? Should we try to
influence policy for the betterment of the snowshoe hare? Should the Big Woods
Hare Hunters of the Allegheny be a pressure group? Are these questions which
need deliberating?
Seneca Resources is making a major push
to sell their property where our habitat project is located. This will only present
new challenges in meeting our goals should Seneca be successful. In 2020-2021, Project 2020 will continue and we’ll
create more impressive habitat in cooperation with the Seneca’s insistence of
liability insurance and the signing of waivers of liability. We already have
several members signed up and ready to cut. We will obtain the necessary
liability items and overcome whatever the challenges. We will prevail.
Future
generations will never know the true enjoyment or relish the beautiful memories
of hunting with beagles which our generation and past generations of beaglers
have enjoyed. In an attempt to interest our youth and our veterans in the great
outdoors and shooting sports of all kinds, the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny have been
challenged to invest in our youth and in our veterans in the pursuit of their
hopes and dreams. We must and will find creative methods of investing in
our youth and our veterans no matter how modest our attempts.
The Big
Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny Foundation takes great pride in supporting
several organizations. The list of groups which we support includes: Camo
Cares, located in Knox, PA., a nonprofit dedicated to sending young people
with life-threatening illnesses and disabilities and wounded veterans on the
hunt of their lifetime. Fryburg Junior Marksmen, a non-profit
competition junior rifle team, located in Fryburg which was founded with the
purpose of teaching fundamentals of gun safety and rifle shooting. Other worthy
non-profits which we invest in include, Clarion County Sportsmen for Youth
Inc., which provides funding for the Clarion County Youth Field Days event
and supports other shooting youth groups locally, Trout Unlimited
provides fly tying and fishing lessons to youth as well as scholarships to
qualified Clarion University students. The National Rifle Association
which supplies endless programs for our country’s youth and defends our hunting
heritage and the Clarion County YMCA which owns and runs Camp Coffman,
giving the youth of Clarion and Venango counties a beautiful place to enjoy the
great outdoors.
The Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny Foundation
supports the “Pine Grove Programs”, headquartered in the great state of
Maine, (our beloved home away from home), a non-profit organization providing
free outdoor experiences to military service members, veterans, Gold star
families, and first responders.
In 2021 our goals are to increase our list of worthy groups and turn our modest investments in these meaningful projects into even more beneficial investments. We shall always support our youth, veterans and first responders for they are the beneficiaries who will inherit our legacy. We pray our youth will be the guardians of our hunting heritage.
The upcoming 2020-2021 season goals include chasing as many snowshoe hares as possible across the Allegheny. The weather will cooperate. New hare cover will be discovered. Conservation minded hare hunters and beaglers will be welcomed, the membership will support our youth and more and better habitat will be produced for the benefit of small game.
The future
looks very bright for the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny!
We look forward to
seeing one and all on the Allegheny!
Monday, August 24, 2020
FROM THE ARCHIVES-January 13, 2009-RABBITS AND HARE 2009
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
RABBITS AND HARE 2009
By Joe Ewing, Sr.
THE APPALACHIAN COTTONTAIL
"What the heck are you babbling about? Do you mean there are actually people who study wild rabbits?" Jim demanded.
"Apparently there are a lot of them spending a lot of your money. A Penn State University researcher is going to spend $115,000 to count snowshoe hare in northern Pennsylvania." I explained. "And don’t ask me how they plan on doing it. This is only one of fifteen projects approved for funding by the Pennsylvania Game Commission and Fish & Boat Commission to study ‘troubled wildlife and fish species.’"
"Okay, I won’t go there, but what about this new rabbit?" Jim asked.
"There is an article in the August 2003 Pennsylvania Game News by a Marcia Bonta that states that in 1982 three scientists ‘split’ the New England cottontail into two species." I informed him.
"Did not know that". Said Jim. "What is a New England cottontail?"
"The New England cottontail is a separate and very rare species of cottontail rabbit. The Eastern cottontail is found almost everywhere unlike the New England cottontail whose range is only New England and northern New York State."
"Where does this new cottontail live?" Jim interrupted impatiently.
"The new species of cottontail are secretive, forest-dwelling rabbits. There are never too many found in any one place and they range only within the Appalachian Mountain chain from eastern New York, down through northeastern Alabama. They inhabit woods, shrubby areas, and brush. This new cottontail resides in dense evergreens and deciduous cover at high elevations. It is associated with conifer and heath habitat, and prefers thicker wooded cover than the eastern cottontail." I reported.
"What is a heath habitat?" Jim asked.
"I think ‘heath’ is a foreign word meaning an extensive tract of uncultivated open land covered with low shrubs and the like." I informed. "Probably like huckleberry, mountain laurel or even blueberry."
"What does this new cottontail eat?" Jim wanted to know.
"It eats a variety of grasses, ferns, forbs, and shrubs."
"It eats Fords?" Jim questioned.
"No, no, I said forbs. A forb is a broad-leaved herb growing in a field or meadow. It also appears to be the only cottontail that feeds extensively on conifer needles. In the winter they also eat twigs and bark."
"They bark," Jim acted surprised, "at the moon?"
"No, they eat the bark of saplings". I corrected. "Just like most rabbits and hare".
"If that is the case, Jim asked, is there a difference in the droppings?"
"Negative", I continued, "In fact there is no difference in the fecal pellets of cottontails or hares to the naked eye. Did you know that rabbits and hares expel two types of fecal pellets, greenish and brown? The greenish pellets contain partially digested vegetation and are commonly reingested. This process is known as ‘coprophagy’. In addition, before you ask, the greenish pellets have a high protein content and contain large amounts of B vitamins produced by intestinal bacteria. This way they make optimum use of the food available and they do not leave behind any nutrients. This process is important to their survival as they can spend more time in cover and less time out in the open feeding."
"What do they call this new rabbit?" Jim asked.
"They call this new species of cottontail the Appalachian cottontail or sometimes it is called the ‘Allegheny’ cottontail. It is obvious why it is called the Appalachian but Allegheny refers to the Allegheny Mountain in the Dolly Sods of West Virginia were the Appalachian cottontail was first named." I reported. "The Dolly Sods is an interesting story all its own. The Dolly Sods Wilderness is located on the Cheat-Potomac Ranger District of the Monongahela National Forest in Tucker and Randolph Counties near Elkins, West Virginia. It is part of the 106 million acre National Wilderness Preservation System. Altitudes range from 3,200 feet to more than 4,000 feet and are said to be a little bit of Canada placed too far south."
"Sounds like a great place for snowshoe hare", Jim observed.
"Yeah, they reportedly have snowshoe hare. Hey, maybe we should go to West Virginia hare hunting sometime?" I suggested. "The Dolly Sods sounds like a remarkable place."
"What does this Appalachian cottontail look like?" Jim wanted to know.
"The Appalachian cottontail supposedly resembles the eastern cottontail very closely. It differs only in its slightly smaller size, shorter ears, and greater amount of black on the back. A narrow black patch is present on top of the head between the ears. The rufous or rusty nap patch characteristic of the eastern cottontail is lacking. So say Linzey and Brecht of Wytheville Community College in Wytheville, Virginia. Some scientists admit that Appalachian cottontails are difficult to distinguish in the field from Eastern cottontails. It gets better, I read that the only way they, the scientists, can honestly tell any difference is by doing an autopsy and measuring the cranium."
"Very fascinating, are there any Appalachian cottontails in Pennsylvania?" Jim asked.
"According to Bonta, scientists first assumed that the Dolly Sods was the preferred habitat of the Appalachian cottontails. But she says that a Dr. Ralph Harnishfeger of Lock Haven University, in Pennsylvania, claims that Appalachian cottontails are found in the very young regenerating forest stands where the tornado went through in 1985 in northern Clinton County. They are also found in a blowdown where pines were planted between windrowed debris, with dense bramble cover and in a dense stand of scrub oak on a SGL (State Game Lands) clear-cut site in Centre County."
"There are cottontail rabbits in the blowdowns in Forest, Elk, and McKean Counties. Do you think they might be this Allegheny cottontail?" Jim asked enthusiastically.
"Do you remember a couple years back when the ANF (Allegheny National Forest) Forester sent us up to the Timberline Trail Head in Elk County to kill the snowshoe hare which were eating his apple trees and all we could find were cottontails?"
"Yeah, I remember, we even killed a couple. Those cottontails ran so big we honestly thought for sure the hounds were chasing snowshoe hare, and then Little Joe shot a cottontail." Jim reminisced. "You wrote in one of your articles that we were starting to find cottontails because of the declining dear herd."
"That’s right, I wrote ‘In Pennsylvania, especially northwest Pennsylvania, the deer herd has been out of control for years. Research has shown that the over-population of deer causes subtle but significant changes to the present and future forest habitat, to the harm of the deer herd and small game, which includes snowshoe hare. Large numbers of deer in relatively small areas lead to over-browsing of forest vegetation. Heavy damage to low-level vegetation also hurts other wildlife. Small game is less abundant. Escape cover, nesting areas, and food sources are severely restricted for such wildlife as the snowshoe hare, ruffed grouse, woodcock, cottontail, turkey and many non-game species. We have started to see more cottontail rabbits in remote forest locations. Maybe, just maybe, the deer herd controls are starting to show some sign of "rabbitat" improvements.’" I recalled.
"Maybe your prognostication is coming true and maybe it is possible that some of those rabbits are Appalachian." Declared Old Jim.
"Maybe…"
Saturday, August 22, 2020
A BEAGLER'S LIFE
From the Allegheny Plateau and the Wilds of Of Pennsylvania
Written
by
Joe Ewing
Photography by
Brenda & Joe
Ewing
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I would like
to quote the late John Yates, founder of the American Sporting Dog
Alliance, “My life is
filled with love and joy and beauty, and I owe most of it to my dogs.”
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Many accomplished beaglers choose to replenish their packs by buying puppies, started beagles or fully trained dogs. I’ve exploited all of the above methods over the years. I’ve bought puppies, I’ve purchased started dogs and I’ve bought “finished” dogs. I’ve had puppies given to me and I’ve traded dogs. These methods all work to varying degrees. The most satisfying to me is seeing a puppy turn into a skillful hare and rabbit chaser.
A tenacious rabbit dog whelped in my kennel by my favorite hare hound which was also whelped in my kennel is the most rewarding of all. What could possibly be more rewarding than witnessing a puppy, who took its first breath in my kennel, transforming into a fantastic hare and rabbit hound? Every success along the path is a welcome and thrilling stage of development. Occasionally, accompanying these great rewards comes anguish and grief.
Just when I think I have everything down pat and I’m getting a little cocky, I get smacked up alongside the head and this lifestyle doesn’t feel so good. When misfortune strikes, it strikes with a vengeance. Misfortune is hard to swallow sometimes, but it’s swallowed, always with a lump deep in the throat. Many times, misfortune causes a feeling of nausea deep in the guts.
Many
beaglers write about the good side of beagling, especially, about all of the great
hounds they’ve owned. Every hunt is a glorious day with ribbons, trophies and
tailgates lined with the day’s kill to prove it.
Just a small sample of Dan Brinsky’s trophy collection. Dan is the former owner of the late Run-Em-Over-Tank.
Misfortune
is defined as a simple case of “bad luck”. Others define misfortune as, “referring
to an event or circumstance that is hard to bear and beyond one’s control.”
“Affliction”, another synonym, suggests misfortune that causes great suffering.
Seldom is misfortune mentioned in the pages of beagling magazines.
We
all recognize beagles as long-lived, with a life span of twelve to fifteen
years and are mostly healthy. Beagles have few hip or back problems and are not
prone to those disorders. Epilepsy, once a problem with beagles, appears to
have been reduced in frequency due to responsible breeding. Beagles are vulnerable
to eye disorders which include glaucoma, cataracts and “cherry eye”. Dogs that
live and work outdoors require special considerations for the climate they inhabit.
Working dogs are exposed to fleas, ticks, mites, cold and wind, and porcupines
just to name a few of the thousands of hazards.
Several porcupine quills, picked up during a chase, required extraction from “Pysco Sid” on a recent outing to the field.
I once believed porcupines were the worst menace anyone could face. I’ve pulled thousands of quills and the porcupine is one of my most despised adversaries. I can’t stress enough how much I hate porcupines.
Several years ago, a litter of puppies was whelped in my kennel containing four females and two males. I was lucky to be given such a beautiful litter of potential hare hounds. The new litter was out of Branko’s High Plateau Duggan and Iron Mountain Tia. Their linage included Branko’s One-Tuff-Hombre, former world large pack champion, just to drop a name. I kept three females and the remaining puppies were presented to beagling friends as appreciative gifts.
Iron Mountain Tia and litter, 2012.
I
named my three puppies, Shadow, Hollie and my granddaughter named the third one,
Aeropostale Aero, Aero for short. Everything went great for two years. The “Three
Amigos” were coming along towards being respectable rabbit dawgs with Shadow
showing signs of being the best of the three.
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·
May 18, 2020 THE
NEW YORK TIMES By James Gorman A New Viral Outbreak Is Killing Rabbits This virus is deadly, long-lived and
highly contagious, but it doesn’t affect people or other animals. It is not a
corona virus. The illness is caused by Rabbit
Hemorrhagic Disease Virus type 2 and does not affect humans or other
animals, only rabbits, hares and perhaps pikas, a rabbit-like animal,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. This is the first outbreak of the virus in wild rabbits
in North America, but there have been other, smaller outbreaks among
domestic rabbits in Ohio, Washington and New York, and in feral rabbits in
Canada.
“We hear rumors of underground rabbit transport, and there are folks that do import rabbits from Europe,” Dr. Zimmerman said. “So, our concern is that somebody brought them in, they were carrying the virus during transport. If one of them died, they pitched it out and boom, we infect the wild rabbits and away we go.” |
The veterinarian stressed there was no cure. “No cure” didn’t immediately register in my inadequate brain. Not what I wanted to hear for sure. He informed me a biopsy could be performed and if the biopsy proved positive for cancer chemotherapy would be the treatment with no guarantee of remission. Sometimes surgery or radiation therapy may be recommended. He declared that he was 95% positive his diagnosis was correct and I took him at his word and Shadow was euthanized that day.
The day I walked into the vet’s office I’d never heard of “lymphoma” and I assuredly couldn’t spell the word. Since that day I’ve studied the subject and now, at least I can spell lymphoma.
Lymphoma is the most common type of cancer in dogs. There it is, the dreaded “C” word. Canine lymphomas, there are 30 types, are similar to non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in humans. There is no cure in dogs but remission is possible.
The first symptom that dogs with multicentric lymphoma, the most common type, usually show is swollen lymph nodes. It’s common for dogs with lymphoma to have lymph nodes 3-to-10 times their normal size. These swellings are not painful and feel like a firm, rubbery lump that moves freely beneath the skin. Dogs with multicentric lymphoma may also develop lethargy, fever, lack of appetite, weakness, swelling of the face or legs. Increased thirst and urination and dehydration may develop.
Lymphoma is diagnosed by performing a “biopsy” which is a minor surgical procedure. A piece of lymph node or another organ affected is removed and viewed under a microscope.
The treatment therapy proven most effective for canine lymphoma is chemotherapy. Most dogs with lymphoma will have a relapse at some point. Lymphoma becomes more resistant to chemotherapy over time. Most lymphomas develop resistance to all chemotherapy drugs and dogs with this disease die or are euthanized when the cancer can no longer be controlled with chemotherapy.
Unfortunately, scientists don’t know
what causes lymphoma in dogs but, they do register several theories which range
from viruses, bacteria, chemical exposure and physical factors such as strong
magnetic fields or other environmental factors. Another supposed cause is genetics.
The bottom line, the cause of this cancer remains unclear and I mistakenly
assumed science knew everything.
Let's stipulate, just for argument sake, we’re certain Roundup® is the culprit. I don’t use Roundup or any chemicals on my lawn, however, the TRUGREEN® man shows up at my neighbors four times a year like clockwork. My kennel is surrounded on two sides by farmland and we all know what the farmer sprays on his GMO soy beans, corn and other crops, Roundup®.
Here is the other kicker;
just this past spring (2020) Hollie, Shadow’s sister, lost her litter. Hollie was
to the veterinarian for a pre-whelping checkup with x-rays showing four puppies
ready for delivery in a few weeks. When the day arrived one puppy was whelped
but then nothing. Labor was at a standstill so off to the vet we raced. The vet
couldn’t induce labor so cesarian (“C”) section was performed. While Hollie was
in surgery her first born puppy was active and healthy.
Hollie’s three remaining
puppies could not be saved. The vet reported one of the puppies was “blue” signifying
lack of oxygen caused by not being whelped and the other two had puss in their
amniotic sacs. Where the infection came from remains a mystery. In a weeks’
time Hollie’s only remaining puppy died from unknown causes and remains another
unexplained mystery.
This spring (2020) misfortune
struck one more time. Shadow and Hollie’s litter mate, Aero, was diagnosed with
kidney failure due to Lyme Disease and was euthanized. Aero gave me and others
some wonderful puppies from the one litter she whelped. She was also a brave
and fearless hare hound. The pack and I will miss her very much.
On the brighter side; Aero
left me with a very determined female hare hound named Muzette Mountain Music. I
know Music will take over where her mother left off. I’m going to breed Music
and make some great hare hounds. I know I can and I know I shall. I’m not
giving up!
Hollie on the hunt.
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