Ollin Magnetic Digiscoping System

On midwestern ground - A Great Depression buck - intro to hunting blinds - A reminder hunting blind - Into the mist - remnant trout - uncertain future

Hydrophilic

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I had a hard time thinking of a title and for some reason a Cormac McCarthy style chapter heading made sense.

I’ve grown up the in west and have hunted vast acres of public land my entire life. Most hunts involve miles and miles of legwork and occasionally sitting on strategic crossovers waiting for animals to cross. It’s a lifestyle I cherish and have grown to appreciate more and more as I’ve learned about the history and sacrifices which have made this lifestyle possible, some of it coming from the creator of this forum.

This fall I returned to my roots, a unique piece of land in Northern Michigan which has been in my family for generations. To be exact - my great, great, great grandparents immigrated here from Sweden. We still have portions of the property in our family and over the years it has fluctuated from potato fields, hay fields, sheep fields, and timber lands.

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The cabin is heavily dotted with antlers from years past. My favorite is this Great Depression buck my grandfather shot when he was young. His first buck.
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I spent my first couple mornings in a pre determined deer blind, assigned to me by a family member. The red glow of a propane heater was both interesting and appreciated.

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I had a hard time sitting in a blind for extended periods. It was interesting being sore from sitting all day, without my full consent, as opposed to being sore from beating the living shit out of myself on public lands back home, with my complete consent.

I decided to leave the blind and do some exploring. Sometimes the land talks and I find If I’m willing to listen it will tell me a lot. This hunting blind has seen better days but it was actually a reminder from my great grandpa that this was a spot to respect.

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The mist in the air would conceal the deer, only to rapidly reveal them for a minute, just before they slipped away again.

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When the time came I crossed paths with a beautiful buck and, with respect, ended his story and made it part of my families. His antlers will be placed among the others in our cabin and tell stories to future generations. He was my first whitetail and I thanked him.

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On my last day I noticed a remnant trout run on a creek which had been cut off from its lake by various means over the years - culverts, dams, etc.

My ancestors would spear giant trout before the run declined and the trout size greatly decreased. It made me ponder the future. Someday I’ll help steward the land and it’s interesting to think about where it will go. Surrounding properties have been carved up into smaller parcels of 40-80 acres. Chronic wasting disease is in the southern portion of the state. Many species of wildlife are struggling to adapt to a rapidly changing world. These issues will be part of the story future generations will hear about.

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Congrats on the buck, and on a hunt well worth remembering! Neat to have that family connection to the land. My relatives had sold off the family farm generations before I came along.

About that blind, I’m curious what others think about that set up. This is meant more as a hypothetical but I’ll use your photo as an example. From what I can see, the ground looks pretty flat, and the shooting lanes are into pretty dense timber. I would consider that an unsafe area to shoot, because there’s no clear backstop. An errant bullet might hit a tree and stop, but it might not. Or not for a while anyway. In private land, it’s not such a concern so long as you know the topography and there’s eventually a hill or other solid ground to act as a secure backstop…but on public land, where anyone could be anywhere, would you all be comfortable with that spot?

I ask because I pass up a lot of spots that I think would be good because of this internal debate, and I wonder if I’m being overly cautious.
 
Good stuff , I would have enjoyed getting to grow up with a family hunting property! But growing up fishing and hunting in Alaska was a pretty good childhood too

Congrats on your first Whitetail, got my 1st last year at 54
 
It was interesting being sore from sitting all day, without my full consent, as opposed to being sore from beating the living shit out of myself on public lands back home, with my complete consent.
this line is Gold. Same thought I have when I go back home to MN for deer season.

Thanks for sharing
 
It's a pleasure to read that not everyone's family has divested themselves of their heritage. Our family's somewhat significant land holdings were pissed away due to poor planning and greed just prior to my college graduation.
 
Nice story !

Another midwesterner here. The ground we live on has been in the family since 1909.
As kids about all we hunted on the place were squirrels, rabbits and a few quail and pheasants, didn't have hardly any deer. Deer started showing up in the early 70's and my Dad killed the first deer ever on this place in 1974, uncle got a buck also that year. Quail and pheasant are scarce now but deer and turkeys are now plentiful.

We've lived here for the last 35 years and have taken a lot of crop ground and turned it into habitat, planted loads of trees and prairie grasses, added ponds, added acreage, etc. It's a pretty sweet piece of hunting property now. We've killed lots of quality deer including several P&Y and one B&C. My son and nephew both killed nice bucks last week so trying to keep the next generation involved.

I've hunted all over for many different species and enjoyed it all thoroughly, but there is something special about hunting home ground with family and friends.
 
It's a pleasure to read that not everyone's family has divested themselves of their heritage. Our family's somewhat significant land holdings were pissed away due to poor planning and greed just prior to my college graduation.

It seems like there's a lot working against family land holdings over the long run. The world changes and sometimes descendants aren't really interested in staying in the area, or economic pressures make the properties easy to sell if there is any doubt about retaining them. I think in our situation it's a combination of luck and economic factors (poorer county without as much demand or development pressure). I remember when I was younger my grandpa telling me he didn't care what happened to the land after he died, luckily it's stayed together as one piece still. A goal I have is to try and leave it a bigger property than inherited but that might be hard.

Thanks for the responses everyone.
 
this line is Gold. Same thought I have when I go back home to MN for deer season.

Thanks for sharing
This was running through my mind last week on my quest for a MN whitetail after a trip to CO for 2nd rifle last month. It wasn’t as well said as the OP.
 
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