April 2008 page 19 Updates

29 April

Land

A sample representing some of the land that we have recently contracted and have in process to lease. Not the best or the worst in terms of habitat just an average example of that land's quality.

 

 

Last year's crop above. Milo on the high ground out of the picture and beans on the low ground shown. Deer trails show shortcuts between the creeks bottom points. Good showing of turkey tracks on both ends of this piece and several crowing pheasants. Not one Bobwhite whistle heard.

 

 

This year's winter wheat on this efficiently clean tilled tract.

 

 

The wet drainage was dry boot crossable in some spots, too wide, much mud and deep to cross over most of it (this was a wet spring for this area). Plenty of internal trails and tree stand trees. Between the trail pattern and wood lot composition even as wide open as the crop fields are this tract has good bow hunt potential. The next time this farm has milo the soft working dog pheasant hunters should find it a spot to hunt.

 

MAHA land inventory sees occasional large acquisitions when we contract from large landholders and smaller additions/deletions representing smaller acreage holders. It is a slow process that occurs throughout the year largely unnoticed until heading out to those localities as most land is held on long leases. Posting these pictures is not intended to highlight this one piece as especially good for any particular reason. It should remind all to double check the update date on the map index to insure no one is missing out on any opportunities.

 

Rare Win

Meijer cuts short contest raising money for Humane Society

"Meijer Inc. has cut short an online pet photo contest that was raising money for the Humane Society of the United States. The Grand Rapids Press reports the retailer stopped the contest Monday after the U.S. Sportsmen's Alliance complained the Humane Society is anti-hunting."

The Associated Press, 4/28/2008, Grand Rapids, MI.

 

Objectivity

"...Since 1998 PETA has killed more than 17,000 animals, nearly 85 percent of all those it has rescued...'With the resources at their disposal, PETA and the Humane Society of the U.S. could become no-kill in no time,' Winograd says. 'Instead they have become leading killers of cats and dogs, and the animal-loving public unwittingly foots the bill through taxes and donations.'"

Animal Rights, PETA and Euthanasia, Even among animal lovers, killing unwanted pets is a divisive issue, by Jeneen Interlandi, Newsweek, Apr 28, 2008.

April 2008 page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 20

 

 

Update Archive

 

Kansas

Iowa

Missouri

 

Deer

Turkey

Upland Bird

Waterfowl