The Great Outdoors: Anticipation Builds for First Day of Buck Season


It’s almost here – the first day of buck season, Pennsylvania’s unofficial holiday!

On Monday, November 27, about three-quarters of a million hunters will take to the woods in search of the buck of their lifetime. And, hundreds of school districts in the Commonwealth close school, so students can hunt with their families and friends.

Antler restrictions enacted by the Pa. Game Commission in 2002 have produced the type and numbers of bucks that few hunters saw before then. Thus, there has never been a better time to bag a big buck.

Part of the fun of the season is the anticipation of opening day.

Young hunters, ages 11 and under, today are fortunate because they have the chance, through the Mentored Youth Program, to hunt when their parents deem they are ready.

When I was that age, it was truly agonizing for me to wait to be old enough to join my dad and granddad into the woods to hunt. Although, I certainly wasn’t limited from spending time in the woods. Growing up with a small forest in our backyard, I spent plenty of time in the woods. But, who likes to be told you can’t come?! However, my relentless nagging to tag along did pay dividends when I was 10.

It was the last day of the 1979 buck season, and there was a fresh coat of snow on the ground. For whatever reason that I do not recall, my dad and granddad hadn’t hunted all day, and I talked my dad into tagging along behind the house for a few hours. I didn’t carry a gun because it wasn’t legal then. Not that I wouldn’t have loved to!

We walked a few minutes to the edge of a patch of hemlock trees, and we stood next to a large oak tree. The idea was that maybe – just maybe – a buck would wander in sight of us. A few doe did show up, and a wild turkey flew into a large tree nearby. For me, that was very exciting. After a while, we moved to the top of the hemlock grove and sat on a log. A large gobbler walked up to us. I bugged Dad to shoot it, but he explained it wasn’t legal because the season was over. How naive of me!

On the first day of the next deer season, I was able to join in, and I stood with my granddad. That man knew how to hunt! His patience – well, I’ll never match it.

When we entered the woods, we typically packed our lunches and thermoses and didn’t leave until it was getting dark. As far as he was concerned, leaving the woods at lunchtime was missing an opportunity for some other hunter to spook a buck that might come our way.

I was 12 the next year, and I was finally allowed to carry a rifle; I could have a chance to bag a buck, so it was a very big deal. We started out the morning standing at the base of a very large oak tree overlooking a deep hollow. We saw some deer, but it was very quiet. After lunchtime, we decided to move. We were below the top of the hill, watching another spot that was scattered with small hemlock trees.

Suddenly, we heard a tree branch crack and turned in time for a fleeting glimpse of a big buck and a doe racing down the hill and into the cover of the trees before either of us could raise our rifles. It was exhilarating and frustrating at the same time, but it perfectly summed up hunting.

That was the last deer season I shared with my granddad. He died of a heart attack the following October. I wished we could have had more time together, but I still relish the time we did have, the lessons I learned from him, and the memories from those days.

Fortunately, I have been able to have many more memorable hunts with my dad, brother, and family friends over the years, and I am looking forward to more this year.

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“The Great Outdoors,” sponsored by the Pennsylvania Great Outdoors, is a weekly blog by exploreClarion.com’s Scott Shindledecker. Plan your next outdoor adventure at VisitPAGO.com or call (814) 849-5197 for more information.


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