Aroostook County Hunting Report: November 16, 2007
The third week of deer season is upon us and here in the North Country the hunters start coming into the lodges and camps. It’s not like it use to be, when the first and second week of deer season had all motels, camps, and lodges full. Speaking to camp owners and motels around the Ashland and Portage areas, there seems to be very few hunters booking reservations the first and second week, but bookings are full for the third and forth week. Another good indicator on how much hunter effort is out there is to check the North Maine Woods gate receipts. The North Maine Woods are managed gates for industrial landowner into unorganized territory, and anyone going through these gates must fill out paperwork on where they are going and type of use. This information is quite interesting in indicating hunter effort throughout October and November. The receipts from the first and second week indicated very few hunters were entering the “Big Woods” for deer hunting, and now with Canadian hunters needing a Maine Registered Guide there should be even fewer hunters.
What seems to be the driving force that hunters are looking for up in these parts, is snow. Snow enables the hunter to direct their hunt to a location where there has been recent deer sign, primarily tracks, or deer beds. With pre-hunt populations only around 2-3 deer per square mile, hunters are looking for any advantage they can find in locating the game. By reading tracks in snow, at least the hunter knows they are hunting in a location where there has been deer recently, and their chances of observing a deer, and hopefully bagging a trophy buck, are considerable better then on dry ground. Snow also offers the hunter the ability to track, by moving slowly along recently laid tracks, where the hunter stalks his prey, to perhaps get close enough to view and harvest a trophy white-tailed deer. Out in the western part of the region there is presently 6-8 inches of snow on the high ground, and 3-4 inches at lower elevation while in the eastern part of the region only about 1 inch of snow.