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Lehigh valley outdoors

By Nick Hromiak

The much anticipated statewide firearms deer hunting season opens Nov 23

11/23/2024

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More than a half-million orange-clad hunters will take to Penn’s Woods Saturday, Nov. 30, for the start of the firearms deer hunting season. The opener is likened to that in popularity to the trout fishing kick-off in spring. 

The season this year includes Sunday, Dec. 1 and continues from Dec. 2-14 for antlered and antlerless deer. 

Last season, hunters harvested an estimated 430,010 whitetails with the buck harvest estimated at 171,600 and the antlerless estimated at 258,410. Even with that, there are a lot of deer in Pennsylvania as they continue to thrive taking residence in many populated, non-hunting areas. 

Some may wonder how the PGC comes up with yearly harvest figures. According to the PGC, last year 31 teams of trained deer agers visited deer processors to collect data, age deer based on tooth replacement and wear, and examined more than 24,000 whitetails. This information plus online reporting system, deer harvest report cards and reporting by phone are used to determine an approximate harvest.

Looking at the 2023-24 buck harvest, it was up by 5 percent over the previous season and up 6 percent over the three-year average. It’s interesting to note that the PGC says that overall, 27 percent of deer hunters harvested a buck. That was a slight increase over 2022-23’s 26 percent rate, and up from 15 percent success rate seen as recently as 2007-08 season. 

The agency points out that the majority of bucks harvested are older than in past decades. Before antler point restrictions, most bucks harvested were yearling deer, meaning those 1.5-years old. In 2023-24, 64 percent of bucks taken were at least 2.4 years old. If sportsmen recall, Gary Alt, the former bear biologist turned deer manager, instituted the point restriction to a lot of backlash from sportsmen who now, in retrospect, should realize his new restrictions produced bigger deer with larger racks. The bucks in reality, got a chance to mature. 

As for the 2023-24 antlerless deer harvest, 69 percent of the harvest was adult females and another 16 percent were button bucks with 14 percent being doe fawns. Equally as interesting, was that one in four antlerless licenses issued last season, resulted in a harvest. Understandably, the regular firearms season accounted for the largest part of the 2023-24 deer harvest. 

The following are total firearms season deer harvest figures for the most popular Wildlife Management Units that Lehigh Valley sportsmen typically hunt in, with 2022-23 figures in parentheses and “A” representing antlered and “AL” antlerless deer. 

WMU 2G: 81,00-A (8,800), and 6,500-AL and 6,500 (5,100)
WMU 3A: 5,200-A (5,700), and 6,000-AL (5,600)
WMU 3B: 7,700-A, and (7,300-AL), and 7,600-AL (8,900)
WMU 3C: 8,900-A (8,000-AL), and 10,600-AL (12,000)
WMU 3D: 6,200-A (5,500), and 7,300-AL (7,400)
WMU 4C: 8,200-A (6,900), and 6,700-AL (8,200)
WMU 5C: 9,100-A (7,200), and 13,100-AL (16,700)
WMU 5D: 2,900-A (2,500), and 6,700-AL (6,700)

With the snow we received last Friday, those hunting the norther tier of the state where there was appreciable snow amounts, should have some good conditions for spotting and tracking deer if need be. 

And with the rut being messed up due to the rains, then drought we experienced, it's still a good time to use deer scent to draw deer in. Bob, from Bob's Taxidermy in Orefield, says his Yurine Luck Deer Pee in Doe-In-Heat and Buck-In-Rut scents are ideal at this time. Call him at 610-398-7609 for his shop hours. 



 
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Pennsylvania's statewide bear firearms hunting season gets underway Saturday, Nov. 26

11/16/2024

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Pennsylvania has become known not only for sizable deer, but large bears as well. And it will be interesting to see what this year has to offer when the firearms season kicks off Saturday Nov. 23. 

The firearms season follows the opener on Sunday, Nov. 24 and continues through Nov. 26. The extended bear season – which runs concurrently with portions of the firearms deer season – goes from Nov. 30 to Dec. 7 including and additional Sunday, Dec. 1 in WMUs 3A, 3B, 3C, 3D, 4C, 4E and 5A, and from Nov. 30 through Dec. 14 including Dec. 1 in WMUs 2B, 5B, 5C and 5D. 

Last year, hunters took 2,920 black bears in Pennsylvania, getting one in 58 of the state’s 67 counties and 20 of it 22 WMUs. That’s out of an estimated population of 18,000 said the Pennsylvania Game Commission. And more than 200,000 hunters pursued them. Even with that number fewer than 3 percent of them fill their tag. 

The breakdown last year was that hunters took seven in the early season, 541 in muzzleloader season and special firearms seasons, 1,086 in the regular firearms season and 591 in the extended seasons. 

According to the PGC, the average female bear weighed 152 pounds; with the average male weighing 198. 

Last years largest bear was a 691-pounder taken in Pike County while five other hunters checked in bruins weighing 600 pounds with each of the top 10 heaviest weighted at least 576 pounds. The PGC says that every year at least one or two topping 700 pounds are taken and seven exceeding 800 pounds have been taken since 1992. The largest was an 875-pounder taken in 2010 in Pike County. 

For hunters trying to increase their odds of scoring, the PGC recommends hunting places bears rest like swamps, mountain laurel, hemlock stands, regenerating clear-cuts, riparian thickets and areas with downed trees. The closest woodlands that have a bear or two and anywhere along the Blue Mountain. 

Coincidentally, last week a black bear was spotted around Lily Sushi Restaurant located at N. 19th Street and Walbert Avenue. And was seen again on a residents Ring camera walking across their driveway at Washington and 27th Street, both in South Whitehall Township. 

As for the top counties that produced the most bear were Tioga, 176; followed by Lycoming ,170; Potter, 155; Pike, 142; Bradford, 138; Luzerne, 135; Monroe, 127; Wayne, 124; Clinton, 108; and Carbon, 101. 

Final county harvests locally here in the Southeast with 2022 figures in parenthesis, Southeast, 159 (131); Schuylkill, 65 (65); Dauphin, 42 (27); Northampton, 21 (12); Berks, 16 (11); Lebanon, 10 (14); and Lehigh, 5 (2). 

For local Wildlife Management Units (WMU), the totals in 3D 451 (344); 4C, 220 (190); 5C, 15 (8). 
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The PGC reminds hunters that their bears must be checked at a PGC authorized check station that are listed in the PA Hunting/Trapping Digest. The only change of what was printed was that the Trout Run Fire Hall in Lycoming County, is closed as the fire hall was destroyed by a flood in August. Hunters in that area should now take their bear to Hepburn  Township Fire Co.’s hall at 615, Route 973, Cogan Station, or another check station.  The PGC also asks hunters to use a stick to prop open their bear’s mouth soon after harvest before the jaw stiffens to allow agency staff to remove a tooth to determine the bear’s age. 






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The fall turkey hunting season is underway in most WMUs in Pennsylvania

11/2/2024

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​Pennsylvania’s fall turkey hunting season got underway today in 22 Wildlife Management Units. Unfortunately  for us here in 5C, the fall season remains closed as it does in 5D since the turkey population is low but stable according to the PGC. But it’s open for the spring gobbler hunt. 

The fall season in WMUs 1B, 3D and 4E is open from Nov. 2 -Nov. 9. WMU’s 1A, 2G, in 4A and 4D the season runs Nov. 2 – Nov. 16. The season in WMU’s 2A, 2F, 3B and 3C runs Nov. 2 – Nov. 16 and Nov. 27 – Nov. 29. In WMUs 2B, 2C, 2D and 2E it’s Nov. 2 – Nov. 22 and again Nov. 22 and Nov 27-Nov. 29; and WMUs 5A and 5B it’s Nov. 2 – Nov. 5. 

The PGC  reminds hunters that the three-day Thanksgiving season will run Wednesday, Thursday and Friday only in applicable WMUs. 

As for the season outlook, the PGC says that female turkeys account for more than 50 percent of the fall harvest. But when turkey populations are below goals in a WMU, the fall season structure is reduced to allow more female turkeys to survive for  nesting. 

However, and according to Mary Jo Casalena, PGC wild turkey biologist, “Fall seasons were lengthened in several units this year and the 2024 summer sighting survey results showed above-average poult recruitment in general, with all WMUs showing good numbers.” Casalena expects this fall season should be a good one. 

More specifically, Casalena cites that the annual turkey sighting survey was conducted July and August and the number of turkey sightings nearly doubled from last year – 30,286 compared to 15,431 in 2023. The reproductive rate index for 2024 came in art 3.2 poults per all hens observed, which is above the previous five-year average of 2.9 poults her hen. This is the first year since the national standardized survey began in 2019 that all WMUs reported indices above the general threshold of 2.0 poults per hen. 

Reproductive success, she goes in to say, vary annually due to many factors particularly spring and summer rainfall, temperature, habitat conditions, predation, insect abundance and hen condition. 

Turkey hunters who shoot a leg-banded bird or if it has a transmitter attached for research purposes, the PGC advises to follow the reporting instructions on the band or transmitter. Last winter the PGC leg-banded more than 600 turkeys including placing backpack style transmitters om 234 turkeys in their effort to track turkey populations. 

The PGC puts out a warning that wild turkeys are highly susceptible to Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza although their behavior and habitat use place them at less risk of contracting the disease compared to waterfowl, shorebirds, raptors and avian scavengers. Regardless, the agency advises hunters who harvest or encounter sick appearing birds to cleanse your hands and clothing and report these sick or dead birds to the PA Department of Agriculture at 717-772-2852 and to the PGC at 833-PGC-WILD or online at www.pgcapos.pa.gov/WHS. 

BEAR HARVEST

So far this season, hunters have had checked more than 900 bears including one that weighed 678 pounds. It was shot, according to the PGC with an inline muzzleloader in Bradford County during the muzzleloader season. We’ll report a full harvest when it becomes available.  


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    Author

    Nick Hromiak has been an outdoors and automotive  writer for over 30 years. He's been published in numerous national and state-wide outdoor magazines and newspapers. 

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