Tuesday, April 30, 2024

2024 Turkey Season - Last Day Hunt Drama

Last Day of Turkey Season Success
Who has ever said I have all the time I need in the Spring to hunt wild turkeys? Not hardly anyone, and I joined that club in 2024 with work conflicts, family commitments, and rainy / windy days all adding up to zero turkeys harvested with one day in the '24 hunt season left. I did have time to scout some along the second half of April, enough to know the whereabouts of some turkeys, and to have heard a few gobbles in the early morning. The hunting gear was dusted off and ready to go at a moments notice, but mostly it was just in the way on the back of a chair throughout April. However, there was never a panic or a shrug about a lost season either. It was just a period of time when I was not in the woods at dawn very much. 

The plan for April 30 was to clear the schedule so that I could hit the woods at dawn, and then hunt as long as needed in hopes of tagging a gobbler. At 6 a.m. I was on a creek bottom where turkeys had frequented in the past, but this year it had been wet late in the season, and as day broke I was nowhere near a turkey, but I did hear a mature tom in the distance and a young tom a bit nearer. No need to pursue a young tom, even if it is the Final Day, so I loaded my gear and began to rummage my way though the woods to strike a gobbler. Nothing. Wildlife was spotted, but the turkeys were invisible. It was 9:30 when I heard a tom gobble loud and clear, and I knew this was it, and suddenly the gear that had been heavy over 3.5-hours of prospecting felt just fine, and I crept slowly and silently towards the gobbler.

Mid-morning Set up April 30

I set up in a spot in the woods where a thicket was on my right and the gobbler was 100-yards ahead of me. I needed the gobbler to approach me satellite-style in order for me to have a shot. He would not budge, so I made a move a bit closer, and then it was on. He came towards me gobbling and strutting, and I could hear ever puff when his feathers blowing up. To be sure, he slowed down and started looking for the hen that my calls told him was nearby. This only served to increase the chance I would be detected, and that I should remain as still as a statue. I listened as the gobbler circled me, not daring a glimpse. As my limbs began to tighten up from the pressure, I never forgot this hunt would come down to my ability to aim the shotgun when the time was right. With only one shotgun shell in my gun, I swung my gun to the left and drew a bead on the head of the gobbler and squeezed the trigger with confidence.

To view blog entries on past turkey hunts click 201920162015 - 2014 - 2013 - 2012 - 2010 - 2009 

Sunday, April 28, 2024

2024 Carolina Bird Club - Spring Meeting

Donnelly WMA birding on 4/26
The Spring meeting of the Carolina Bird Club came to Charleston April 26 - 28 and birders from across the Carolinas were in attendance. Beginning Friday morning, birders fanned out across the Lowcountry to known birding places up and down the coast. My job as leader at Donnelley WMA was to meet a party of 15 at 7:45 and show them the water features and birdy locales that I know on this property. Everyone was greeted by Wood Storks standing beside the road near the front gate, and it wasn't long and we saw a range of other birds such as summer tanager, mottled duck and anhinga. A cool morning with a strong breeze meant that everything was stirring and we experience the kind of magical day when 74 species were revealed to us by noon. On Friday afternoon, I joined a group of birders at Seabrook Island led by Judy Morr and we visited a rookery of herons that was exquisite, and included an osprey nest. 

Photographer making pics of Red Knots from a safe distance

To view past birding trips from 2024 click on Earth Day / Kiawah - Spring Island - Southeast Shorebird Festival - Hammock Coast Birding Festival - Huntington Beach State Park - Yawkey Center - Yemassee CBC - Edisto CBC 

Beautiful Bald Eagle with Nesting Material


Thursday, April 25, 2024

2024 Kiawah Conservancy - Earth Day Birding

2024 was my second year joining the Kiawah Conservancy for Earth Day, and it was a spectacular day
Black-necked Stilts on the beach

to be on a barrier island. Crisp cool weather and breezy conditions persisted all day, and it never did really get warm. A piece of property on Kiawah under a conservation easement known as The Preserve was the meeting place for this naturalizations walk with a Staffer. We traversed trails that shows signs of recent saltwater intrusion due to high tides and NE winds. A large observation tower there overlooks a beautiful pond that is situated between two linear hummocks that were actually once front beach sand dunes. A stunning trio-color heron was fishing there, and had the prettiest blue beak I could remember seeing. A kingfisher, egret and alligator rounded out the pond sightings. When I looked into nearby pine trees, and we were now at tree top level in the tower, I heard and then spied a male painted bunting perched on a dead limb in the sun. We heard a bald eagle and an osprey and took time to notice glasswort and dragonflies too. I stopped at the beach afterward and saw red knots, and some black-necked stilts. 


Painted Bunting at The Preserve 
To view past birding trips from 2024 click on Carolina Bird Club - Southeast Shorebird Festival - Hammock Coast Birding Festival - Huntington Beach State Park - Yawkey Center - Yemassee CBC - Edisto CBC 


Black scoters surfing on Earth Day

Saturday, April 20, 2024

2024 Charleston Race Week at Patriots Point

2024 Race Locations Map
The 2024 Charleston Race Week (CRW) was the second year being based out of the Yorktown, after and long run next door at Charleston Harbor Resort. A name change was unveiled in 2024 regrading the new partnership with Mt. Pleasant and the East of the Cooper Community, and is now known as Charleston Race Week at Patriots Point. A unique Pro-Am sailing format is not included in the regular three-day format, pairing local high school sailors with some of CRW's veteran crew for a hands on learning experience under sail. Charleston Harbor still is home to all the races, but now al the shoreside suppers are held on the hanger deck of the Yorktown, amid the Naval History Museum nostalgia.

Team Flamingo sailing inshore

To read my feature article on 2024 CRW in the Post and Courier click on Tideline.

To view past blog entries from Charleston Race Week click on 2021 - 20182017 - 2016 - 2015 - 2014 - 2013 - 2012 - 2011 - 2010 - 2009  


Tuesday, April 16, 2024

2024 Spring Island - Spring Birding

Sedge Wren in morning light
The Fripp Island Audubon Club visited Spring Island on April 5 to look for signs of migration. Meeting ornithologist Andy Jones at the Trust Barn allowed everyone to load up onto the wagon for a trailer ride birding experience. Our travels began on the edge of land in a marshy area that is known for shorebirds and sparrows, and we saw several of each. The next stop was a maritime forest to let the group marvel at the range of species of trees that occur there. We rode by impoundments, open fields and even went to a towering hill of dirt, all in search for birds. One stop in particular was more exciting for me, since it was my first glimpse of the wood stork rookery at Spring Island. Even though I had taken the Master Naturalist class at Spring Island, the rookery was new to me! The grand finale was driving under a live oak allee' near the golf course where many warblers were flitting about in the Spanish moss and tree tops.
Fripp Audubon Birders


To view past birding trips from 2024 click on Carolina Bird Club - Earth Day / Kiawah - Southeast Shorebird Festival - Hammock Coast Birding Festival - Huntington Beach State Park - Yawkey Center - Yemassee CBC - Edisto CBC 

Wood Stork with nesting material