We had a great Black Friday. We drove within 50 yards of a small Wal-Mart, but did not stop. (There was probably no place to park anyway.)
The photos below show where we went on Friday, November 25, the day after Thanksgiving.
We hiked the trail in the Barn Hollow State Natural Area.
My hiking partners were Linda, my dad, my sister Janet, and her husband Dwight.
We needed the exercise and fresh air after our big Thanksgiving dinner the day before.
Barn Hollow is the local name for the intermittent stream that drains directly into the Jacks Fork River. The 252-acre state area is deeply dissected by the 1.2-mile long canyon.
The Conservation Department purchased the area in 1979. To protect the unique rugged topography and native flora, 115 acres of the tract were designated as a natural area.
We viewed the narrow, steep-walled hollow from a viewing platform located at the end of a one-half mile foot trail.
I counted seven 20-ft contour intervals on my topo map from the ridge top to the bottom of Barn Hollow. That means it is at least 140 feet deep.
We had a great Black Friday!
Eat your hearts out, you Shoppers.
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Deer Season Holiday
It was a holiday! Students at Mountain View - Birch Tree schools are back in class today after having the first Monday of the firearm deer season off. We didn't have that holiday when I was in school. Summersville got two days off. Winona students get the whole week off. But that's nothing. At Eminence school will resume after Thanksgiving. That's 7 days for deer season and 3 more for Thanksgiving. If recent history holds true, over 200,000 deer will be harvested by Missouri firearm hunters during Nov. 14-24. Another 40,000+ will be taken by archer hunters during a 4-month season. Various other specialty deer hunting seasons will add to the total.

All across North America abundant deer numbers will bring out a multitude of hunters this fall. But it hasn't always been so. The estimated Missouri deer population in the mid-1800s was 700,000. But by 1925 the estimate fell to 395 deer in 23 counties.
According to Dean Murphy (1970), "The decline of the deer herd prior to 1925 was caused by year-round hunting for market, food or sport: deer of either sex and all ages were killed. Traps, snares, nets and dogs were used in additions to guns."
In the general election on November 3, 1936, the Missouri Conservation Commission was established and modern wildlife management came to Missouri. Deer hunting was closed in 1938-1944. Bennitt and Nagel (1937) "believed that the illegal kill equaled or exceeded the legal kill and was the chief limiting factor on growth of the deer herd."
Restoration of the deer herd was accomplished by careful studies of deer life history, habitat requirements, and land use factors. That was followed by strict law enforcement and transplanting wild deer from refuges (Peck Ranch, Knob Noster, Drury, Caney Mountain) to areas of suitable habitat. From 1937 to 1957 2,343 deer were moved to 70 release sites in 54 counties. Bucks-only hunting resumed in 1945 and the first any-deer season was in 1951.
Today's deer hunters probably don't realize how good they have it. My Grandpa David was a squirrel hunter and a woodsman who lived in Ohio, Illinois, and Missouri in 1882-1976. But he did not see a live deer until he was 75 years old in 1957.
My Grandpa LeBaron was a deer hunter. He was one of the lucky few (about 100) who shot a deer in 1937, the last open season before closure. He shot a nice buck. That mounted head adorned the wall at Grandpa and Grandma's house when I was a kid. I loved to admire it and ask Grandpa about it. He shot it in Carter County with a rifle borrowed from Grandma's family, the Partneys. The rifle had 70 notches in the stock which served as a record of deer shot for the market. Seeing a deer was so rare that the carcass hung all day at the ice plant at Mountain View. The butcher couldn't cut it up because there was a crowd around it all day.
So... Go get 'em, you deer hunters. I don't want to hit any more deer with the car.

All across North America abundant deer numbers will bring out a multitude of hunters this fall. But it hasn't always been so. The estimated Missouri deer population in the mid-1800s was 700,000. But by 1925 the estimate fell to 395 deer in 23 counties.
According to Dean Murphy (1970), "The decline of the deer herd prior to 1925 was caused by year-round hunting for market, food or sport: deer of either sex and all ages were killed. Traps, snares, nets and dogs were used in additions to guns."
In the general election on November 3, 1936, the Missouri Conservation Commission was established and modern wildlife management came to Missouri. Deer hunting was closed in 1938-1944. Bennitt and Nagel (1937) "believed that the illegal kill equaled or exceeded the legal kill and was the chief limiting factor on growth of the deer herd."
Restoration of the deer herd was accomplished by careful studies of deer life history, habitat requirements, and land use factors. That was followed by strict law enforcement and transplanting wild deer from refuges (Peck Ranch, Knob Noster, Drury, Caney Mountain) to areas of suitable habitat. From 1937 to 1957 2,343 deer were moved to 70 release sites in 54 counties. Bucks-only hunting resumed in 1945 and the first any-deer season was in 1951.
My Grandpa LeBaron was a deer hunter. He was one of the lucky few (about 100) who shot a deer in 1937, the last open season before closure. He shot a nice buck. That mounted head adorned the wall at Grandpa and Grandma's house when I was a kid. I loved to admire it and ask Grandpa about it. He shot it in Carter County with a rifle borrowed from Grandma's family, the Partneys. The rifle had 70 notches in the stock which served as a record of deer shot for the market. Seeing a deer was so rare that the carcass hung all day at the ice plant at Mountain View. The butcher couldn't cut it up because there was a crowd around it all day.
So... Go get 'em, you deer hunters. I don't want to hit any more deer with the car.
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