Public’s help sought in pronghorn poaching near Stanley

An illegally killed pronghorn buck was discovered recently near Stanley, and Idaho Department of Fish and Game is asking the public for information to bring the poacher to justice.

While working in the Stanley area on Aug. 14, Fish and Game conservation officers Johnathan Beer and Malcolm Clemenhagen found the carcass of a young pronghorn buck approximately 130 yards east of Highway 75 near the junction with Pettit Lake Road. Based on the location, Beer believes the pronghorn buck was likely shot from the highway. The entire carcass was left to rot.

“The pronghorn was likely shot with a small caliber bullet, .223 or smaller, sometime the early morning we discovered it,” Beer said.

The archery season for pronghorn opened in the area the next day. Evidence was collected at the scene, but Beer hopes to learn more about the case from any eyewitness or others who have knowledge of the incident.

“Someone in addition to the poacher knows about this, and we’d like to visit with them,” Beer said.

Citizens Against Poaching is offering a reward for information and callers can remain anonymous. Call the CAP hotline at 1-800-632-5999 twenty four hours a day. In addition to the CAP hotline, persons with information regarding this case may also contact the Fish and Game in Salmon at 208-756-2271.

Want to get away from the city? Check out Wild Skies

Last week, my wife, Katy, and I ran over to northwest Colorado to check out the Wild Skies Flat Tops Cabin, which is a couple of hours southeast of Craig. If you want to be off the grid, you ought to check them out. They do have Wi-Fi, but everything is solar charged. There are no electrical lines running back there.

Thirty years ago, I blackpowder hunted a lot north of there but never in this particular area. Proprietors’ Chip and Lisa Bennet claim that the Flat Tops are home to the largest herd of elk in America. I’m trying to figure out how I can go back archery elk hunting in a couple of weeks, but I have gotten slammed with projects worse than ever. It’s a scary world when you have a hard time fitting in an elk hunt!

When Katy and I arrived, we were greeted by Lisa and her family. They have three delightful, well-mannered kids who were a joy to be around. We unloaded and then sat around the table strategizing for a bit. Then I whipped out some rib-eyes that I’d brought, and we grilled them with corn on the cob, and Lisa heated up a pan of yams. We had a great meal and a pleasant evening.

Their family is very much into working with ways to preserve the wild mustangs, and they shared a lot of those ideas with us. Lisa is in hopes that Bass Pro Shops will build a store in Craig and preserve the local museum and incorporate it with a mustang project.

It soon got dark and they had to head home and back to their lives. The next morning, Katy and I dropped down to the river below the cabin. Even though it is a pretty large river, like a lot of mountain creeks and rivers, it was brushy and you had to mainly fish the holes. I was wanting to teach Katy how to fly fish, but it would have been a tough river to learn on.

So we soon decided to hike up the mountain and look for signs of elk. We hiked around a while and then decided to go exploring. We headed up the road through the Routt National Forest, and I assume towards the Flat Tops, but I didn’t have a map so I’m not sure.

We had a great day just being together in the high country. I’ve been gone a lot lately, and it looks like it’s going to get worse, so it was good to get away with my little bride. We didn’t get to stay near as long as we would have liked to have.

I had ordered some Bushka’s Kitchen freeze-dried meals for lunches while we were hiking, but they didn’t make it in before we left. I’ve got a backpacking trip lined up in a few weeks, so we’ll test them out then. It’s good to see another backpacking meal company hit the market.

There are a lot of high mountain lakes, rivers and creeks I’d like to have fished. To adequately fish the high mountain lakes, you need a canoe or small jon boat. Or what else works great are float tubes. It is hard to wade a lot of the lakes because they have a soft silty bottom and you sink down pretty deep before you can get out very far.

Then there are a million trails to hike, mountains to scout and all of the high mountain adventures to hit. I took my Riton Optics binoculars and got to do a little glassing but not near as much as I wanted to. I was hoping to be able to do some serious scouting for elk but we just ran out of time.

If you want to take your family on a getaway to a super nice lodge you ought to check out Wild Skies. More information can be found at wildskies.com. The Flat Tops Cabin can sleep up to 14 people. It’d be a great cabin for family vacations, snowmobiling, fishing or elk hunting. It is a super nice cabin and a great place to use as a base camp.

To elk hunt, it would be a self-guided hunt. I think the smart thing would be to do a family vacation in July or August and combine it as an elk scouting trip. Then run back to elk hunt.

Well, our time soon ran out, and we loaded up and had to run over to Malad and visit Ron and Betsy Spomer for a few days on their Dancing Springs Ranch. That was a fun, kicked-back time to see our old friends. We did some shooting, filming and doodling. Then it was time to head back home and pound on the keyboard and crank out some articles. Don’t let the summer slip away before you do one more backcountry trip.

Tom Claycomb lives in Idaho and has outdoors columns in newspapers in Alaska, Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Colorado and Louisiana.

Take a day trip to Craters of the Moon

ARCO — As summer winds down, Craters of the Moon park will host ranger-guided walks and other events, said a press release, and the Visitor Center is open daily from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. through Sept. 28 and 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. thereafter.

You can view exhibits and audio-visual presentations to learn more about the park. Plus, there are publications for sale in the bookstore about the cultural and natural history of Craters of the Moon and the region. In addition, also through Sept. 28, are ranger-guided walks and talks.

Climb a volcano, explore a lava tube or attend a presentation. And this Sunday, National Park Service Birthday, there is no admission fee. Celebrate the 102nd anniversary of the National Park Service with a visit to Idaho’s largest national park unit. Entrance is free to all National Park System areas on this day.

Upcoming events include:

  • Sept. 28 from 1 to 4 p.m.: Nature Photography Workshop: Douglass Owen, a retired park ranger, naturalist, educator and photographer, will present this three-hour workshop. His book, “A Park Ranger’s Guide to Nature & Wildlife Photography” was published in 2019 and is available in the bookstore. Learn techniques and practices to improve your photographs. Event is sponsored by the Craters of the Moon Natural History Association and will be held in the Craters of the Moon visitor center theater. Reservations are required, and the class is limited to 32 people. Contact the park at 208-527-1335 or crmo_information@nps.gov to make a reservation.
  • Sept. 28 and Nov. 11: Fee Free! Craters of the Moon National Monument will join all national parks across the country in waiving entrance fees to celebrate National Public Lands Day and to honor our veterans.

A steelhead smolt sensation

Magic Valley steelhead hatcheries rear over 5 million steelhead smolts each year to provide fishing opportunity to anglers.

Each year, steelhead anglers throughout the state reap the benefits of fish reared in Magic Valley steelhead hatcheries. Because of the area’s cold clean water, three local Idaho Fish and Game hatcheries in the Snake River canyon raise steelhead that will ultimately be released as smolts to begin their migration to the Pacific Ocean. Depending on the strain of either an A-Run or B-run, Idaho steelhead will spend the next 1-2 years maturing in the saltwater before returning to Idaho. Steelhead have an anadromous life history that begins in freshwater. As smolts, they migrate to the ocean to mature, and return to freshwater as adults to spawn.

Hatcheries mimic the natural lifecycle

Beginning in late spring, regional staff from the Magic Valley, Niagara Springs, and Hagerman National fish hatcheries rear approximately 5 million steelhead from eggs taken from adults at various hatcheries around the state. Over the next eleven months, the young steelhead grow, reaching approximately 8.5 inches in length and weighing nearly four ounces, the perfect size for smolt to begin their migration to the Pacific Ocean.

Identifying hatchery vs. wild steelhead

After hatching and growing for three months in raceways inside hatchery buildings, local hatchery crews move the small fry to outside raceways in August. Using specially designed pumps, fish are transported in large hoses from one location to the other. While making the move, each fish will take a detour through a specially designed trailer where an automated system removes their adipose fin which identifies it as a hatchery-raised fish, and at the same time, it’s measured and weighed.

The adipose fin is a small fleshy fin located between the large dorsal fin on top of the fish and its tail, is not useful as swim fin. Removal of the adipose does not negatively affect the fish, but it does help anglers tell the difference between a hatchery and wild fish. To provide fishing opportunity while protecting wild steelhead stocks, Fish and Game fisheries managers, working with the Fish and Game Commission, can often allow anglers to keep hatchery fish, or those without an adipose fin, when sufficient numbers of these fish return from the Pacific Ocean. Anglers are not allowed to keep steelhead that have an intact adipose fin by regulation.

A percentage of the young fish will also have an extremely small coded wire tag, about the thickness of a human hair, inserted into their snout. The coded wire tag has a unique code imprinted on the wire that allows the fish to be identified by its hatchery of origin if caught later as an adult. Steelhead that get the coded wire tag do not have their adipose fin clipped, even though they are hatchery-raised fish. This helps to insure that some hatchery fish are not harvested, because they appear to the angler to be wild, with their intact adipose fin.

Ensuring fish for the future

Once adult steelhead are collected at weirs, fishery managers use a small piece of equipment to scan returning adults with adipose fins to see if the fish is indeed a wild fish or a hatchery-raised fish. This is important because the hatchery fish are used as broodstock to supply the eggs and milt to ensure another generation of steelhead are available to anglers. Wild steelhead are then released to continue their upstream migration where they will spawn naturally, to ensure that Idaho continues to have healthy sustainable populations of wild steelhead.

ISU researchers study trumpeter swans on Southeast Idaho wildlife refuges

POCATELLO — Idaho State University biological sciences master’s student Paige Miller has continued ISU research of Southeast Idaho trumpeter swans this summer by using remote cameras and placing tiny thermometers inside of empty egg shells.

She is continuing research begun by ISU Professor Dave Delehanty and former master’s student David Bush. Bush and Delehanty who, among other things, detailed patterns of trumpeter swan egg incubation at Grays Lake National Wildlife Refuge. Miller is expanding his research to include the swans nesting at the Bear Lake and Camas refuges, which are all part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services Southeast Idaho Refuge Complex.

Her research is important in a number of ways.

“Swans, trumpeter swans in particular, are the most massive bird in North American,” Miller said. “These are big, beautiful, charismatic birds that people are enamored by. The really interesting thing about them is that they were critically endangered for so long they are, in my opinion, one of the most fascinating conservation stories to date, going from under 100 known individuals in the Rocky Mountain area to thousands. They’ve rebounded and are doing quite well.”

Because the birds are doing so well it provides the opportunity for more detailed research on their behavior.

“Understanding the species that occupy these wetlands gives us knowledge that has implications for managing those populations and, therefore, managing wetlands,” Miller said. “Wetlands in general are important habitat because they can reduce the impacts of floods, filter water, and provide a lot of biodiversity and resource potential for people to enjoy and utilize.”

In late spring and early summer, Miller was out in the marsh visiting swans’ nests almost daily, deploying camera systems and then going back every few days to switch out SD cards and batteries. The cameras allow researchers to monitor the swans 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week, to investigate swan incubation constancy across the refuges.

“Setting up the camera systems on the nest and being able to review the footage, we get to see swans from right after they laid the eggs, to the incubation and maintenance of the nest, to hatching the eggs to teaching their cygnets (baby swans) on how to be a swan and survive,” she said.

“It is really cool to see the cygnets learn behaviors from their parents.”

She said she’s also interested in Bush’s results that seem to indicate that the times Trumpeter Swan spend away for the nest taking a break to do self-maintenance behaviors are occurring and correlating with the time of day, one in the morning and evening.

“So we wondering if that may additionally correlate with temperature,” she said.

The birds rarely take recesses mid-day, possibly because eggs would be exposed to too much heat from direct sunlight and they stay on nest at night so eggs aren’t exposed to colder temperatures. Most of the time, when leaving, the birds cover the eggs with nest vegetation.

“We’re wondering if the nest itself acts as a kind of compost heap as it is in crocodilian species and if the nest has any temperature regulating effects on the eggs,” Miller said. “For the thermal part of my project, I’ve set up and deployed little, tiny temperature sensors called iButtons. I actually planted those inside of empty swan eggs, that were infertile and donated by the Wyoming Wetlands Society. These were placed in swan nests after the cygnets hatched and left with their parents.”

She blew the contents out of the eggs and installed the temperature sensors inside so the researchers could simulate the effects of temperature on a swan egg that was in the nest exposed to harsh sunlight and environmental conditions, and one egg buried in the vegetation of the nest.

While Miller was in the field this summer studying Southeast Idaho swans, Delehanty and Bush were up in Alaska presenting the results of ISU’s previous swan research at the 2019 American Ornithological Society meeting in Anchorage this June. The title of their presentation was “Incubation Behavior of Trumpeter Swans Measured by Continuous Infrared Videography.”

“We greatly appreciate the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for access to several swans’ nests so that we could complete these studies,” Delehanty said.

Hiker with local ties recalls harrowing week in Montana-Idaho wilderness

FLORENCE, Montana (AP) — A Utah man with ties to Southeast Idaho said he ate berries and bugs to survive for nearly a week while lost in wilderness along the Idaho-Montana border.

Kaden Laga, 25, is about to become a father and told himself he had to survive and make it home to his pregnant wife no matter what, he told Salt Lake City station KUTV in an interview Sunday.

Several friends in south Bannock County reportedly responded to a request from Laga’s family, made on Facebook, to pray for his safe return while he was missing.

Laga, of Orem, was on a horseback outing in Bitterroot-Selway Wilderness on Aug. 11 when one of the horses in the group went lame. He said he volunteered to hike back to the trailhead and get help but took a wrong turn and got lost without cellphone service.

He carried only a water bottle and a Ziploc bag, KECI-TV in Montana reported

“I ate a lot of grasshoppers. I only ate one ant, it was my dessert,” he said.

Meanwhile, search crews were combing the forest as aircraft flew overhead. Laga saw a helicopter at least twice, but the searchers couldn’t see him through the thick trees, he said.

“They’re coming and I’m like ‘This is it, they’re going to get me,’ then whoosh! And they just take off the other direction,” he said, KUTV reported.

Finally, Laga discovered a trail and wandered into a search camp on Friday.

His wife Arden Laga said she collapsed when she heard the news.

“I just fell to my knees and I’m just on my hands and knees. He did it. He’s alive. He’s OK. We’re OK. It’s finally over,” she told KECI-TV.

—The Idaho State Journal contributed to this report.

Feel lost hunting? Maybe reach out to the Idaho Outfitters and Guides Association

I have never hunted with a licensed outfitter or guide in Idaho because I grew up hunting with my father and two of his brothers: my uncle Floyd and uncle Veral. My uncle Floyd owned a sporting goods store in Blackfoot when I was growing up in the mid-1950s and early ’60s. My father bought our .22 rifles and our big game hunting rifles as well as our 12-gauge shotguns from uncle Floyd’s shop.

My father and uncles hauled me all over Idaho hunting different areas each year. One of the most important things I learned was the need to scout possible hunting areas during the months before hunting season arrived so I knew where game could be found and where I wanted to set up a camp.

My favorite trips during those years were generally to the central mountain regions of Idaho. In the years since, I have scouted and hunted areas in south and Southeast Idaho also, using the skills that were taught to me by my father and uncles, who learned the skills from my grandfather Merkley.

Today it seems that many hunters feel too busy to spend time scouting, so they get what information they can from other hunters, many of whom haven’t scouted either, but remember seeing deer somewhere. They then head for their chosen area and hope they will luck into a deer or elk. Some may very well get lucky, but my impression is many come home disappointed.

If that sounds anything like your experience, maybe hunting with a outfitter and one or two of the guides that work for the concession is just the thing you need to find and fill your hunting tag.

If so, you should look up the Idaho Outfitters and Guides Association website and get a list of outfitters and guides that work in the area or unit you want to hunt.

With the most square miles of wilderness hunting in the lower United States, Idaho has more public land for hunting than any other state except for Alaska.

IOGA has registered outfitters in every part of Idaho who have been guiding people from all over the United States and many foreign countries on big game hunting trips. They can certainly do the same for busy Idaho hunters also.

IOGA member outfitters will provide all equipment necessary for getting into the hunting area, food during the trip, tents or shelter, as well as guides that know where to find game and how to cape an animal in preparation for taxidermy services. The hunter usually provides his own rifle, ammunition or bow and arrows. What the guide won’t do is shoot your game for you. The guide’s job is to put you in a position to shoot your game yourself.

Interestingly, women make up 25 percent of the guiding industry. Most guides are white water guides, or fishing guides, with hunting guides coming in third in terms of what guides like to specialize in doing. Most guides in Idaho are full time for two to 10 years, who work six to 10 weeks a year and make 50 percent of their yearly income guiding. Two-thirds of the Idaho guides are registered Idaho residents.

In a recent survey, most guides indicated they would like more training in entertainment skills and more training in emergency medicine. In the same survey, most guides listed conservation as their top priority.

You can even join IOGA as an individual associate member for $25 even if you aren’t an outfitter or guide. The benefits are free listing in the IOGA directory, annual meeting with educational sessions, update on issues, exhibitors, fun and camaraderie, and information on IOGA activities related to state and federal agency and legislative issues, group marketing and all relevant topics.

I realize that joining IOGA won’t be of interest to many, but I thought I might as well mention it in case there was some interest.

If you would like a free full color directory of IOGA member outfitters, You can request one from their website, ioga.org, or by calling 1-800-49-IDAHO.

Smokey Merkley was raised in Idaho and has been hunting since he was 10 years old. He can be contacted at mokeydo41245@hotmail.com.

Want to catch a boatload of fish? Check out Plummer’s Lodges

My daughter and I just got back from an awesome fishing trip at Plummer’s Arctic Lodges up in the Northwest Territories. Lorane Poersch introduced me to Chummy Plummer four or five years ago when I was conducting some seminars at the SCI Convention in Vegas. I liked Chummy right away. Lorane wanted me to do an interview with him and write an articles. So that’s how that I met him.

Chummy started guiding when he was 13 years old — and realize, this fishing isn’t on your friendly neighborhood crappie fishing lake. It is up in the Northwest Territories, which, as you can imagine, is some remote country.

Chummy’s granddad and dad Warren owned several businesses in Flin Flon, Manitoba. (Uniquely, my father-in-law fished north of Flin Flon for over 20 years and took my wife there every summer as a kid and later took me there as well.) Later they happened to fish on Great Slave Lake. They got there by a canoe and a 2 ½ horsepower motor. They fell in love with the spot and later built the Plummer’s Great Slave Lake Lodge, which is where we fished this week.

They’ve expanded, and now they own the Plummer’s Great Bear Lake Lodge, Plummer’s Great Slave Lake Lodge, Plummer’s Trophy Lodge, Plummer’s Tree River Outpost and the Plummer’s Artic Circle Outpost, which is a self-guided lodge. The Tree River Outpost is home to the largest Arctic char on the planet and flows into the Arctic Ocean.

So, there’s a little history and facts. Now for the fun stuff. We flew into Yellow Knife, which is the capitol of the NWT and grabbed a room. The next morning, we jumped on a plane and got to the lodge in time for a hot breakfast. We then bought fishing licenses, met our guide and took off fishing. The whole organization is super efficient, and the staff is over-the-top friendly. Kolby and I drew Darrel Smith for our guide.

Our main target was lake trout, which is what the lake is famous for, but there were plenty of graylings and you can also find some Northerns, which I love to fish for. Of course, Kolby caught the largest Northern and lake trout.

Big spoons are popular and work well up there. I took some jigs and plastics, but they weren’t big enough. We also had good luck on a lure called a Bondy.

The lake trout fishing was unbelievable. I do not know how many we caught and at least three times had double hook-ups. Needless to say, the fishing was everything we could have hoped for.

The week before, it had been cold, which you’d expect for being up near the Arctic, but for us the weather was great — in fact, we got sunburned every day! I did not expect that but was pleasantly surprised. Of course, the mornings and evenings were cool, especially when zipping out 15 miles to our fishing holes. We used Frogg Togg Pilot Pro Jackets and Pilot Pro Bibs to block the wind. Then to keep warm under the Frogg Toggs we wore XGO base layers. We had originally taken some Fish Monkey Pro 365 Guide Gloves to protect our hands while fighting and handling big fish, but a side blessing was that they also helped keep our hands warm while zipping around in the boat and protected us from getting sun burned.

Canadian shore lunches are legendary as discussed in a previous article.

They say it gets dark two hours per day this time of year, but that was long after I went to bed, so I never saw it. Needless to say, you could fish yourself to death. Some kids caught plenty of graylings off the dock. In fact, one kid was fighting a grayling and a lake trout crashed the party and spooled him.

I could talk about the trip forever. Seeing a big gray wolf on the bank that sprawled out and looked at us. Or one of the other groups saw some musk ox. But to summarize, if you want to catch a boatload of fish, check out Plummer’s Lodges. It was a great father-daughter bonding time. We discussed and solved a lot of the world’s problems!

More information can be found at plummerslodges.com.

Tom Claycomb lives in Idaho and has outdoors columns in newspapers in Alaska, Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Colorado and Louisiana.

Lawsuit seeks to halt construction of central Idaho trail

STANLEY — Central Idaho ranch owners want construction of a trail connecting the popular tourist destinations of Redfish Lake and Stanley stopped and additional work to make it a smooth path for hikers and bikers prohibited.

Sawtooth Mountain Ranch owners David Boren and Lynn Arnone have been fighting construction of the trail with a federal lawsuit against the U.S. government and last week filed new documents contending the proposed trail violates terms of an easement.

The U.S. Forest Service has a conservation easement deed dating to 2005 that allows a trail 30 feet wide to cross about 1.5 miles of private property.

The lawsuit recognizes that an easement exists but contends it doesn’t allow the Forest Service to bring in machinery to create or maintain an improved trail for recreationists.

The lawsuit asks the court to rule that defendants “may not enter and construct, use, or maintain a developed commuter trail through the property.” The lawsuit says signs for the trail could be put up on the “unaltered landscape.”

The filing follows a federal judge’s order in June allowing work on the trail to begin after a ruling that Boren and Arnone failed to show they were likely to succeed on the merits of their arguments. That initial lawsuit filing contended the plan needed additional environmental reviews, and that the proposed path strayed from the easement.

The lawsuit names the U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Forest Service, Sawtooth National Recreation Area and others.

The U.S. Department of Justice, which defends federal agencies in lawsuits, didn’t immediately respond to an inquiry from The Associated Press.

Dave Coyner of Quality Asphalt Services has a contract to build the trail. He said Friday that work hasn’t started. He said the plan is to start on the north end of the trail near Stanley, a tiny mountain community heavily dependent on tourism. The northern end is where the easement is located through private land as well as some wetland areas that Boren and Arnone contend need additional environmental study.

The Forest Service for years has wanted to build the trail in the rugged, scenic area that attracts thousands of tourists and offers many outdoor recreation activities.

The trail is also part of a bill signed into law by President Barack Obama in 2015 creating three new wilderness areas in central Idaho.

Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho sought support for the wilderness areas for years among local residents, environmentalists and ranchers before finally finding the right mix.

The deal that emerged brought in more than $1.5 million for trail maintenance in the Sawtooth National Recreation Area and includes money to build the new trail between Redfish Lake and Stanley.

Clear Springs Foods donates giant trout to anglers in Challis and Salmon

CHALLIS — Anglers in Challis and Salmon can now catch the excitement as Clear Springs Foods recently donated 1,400 giant hatchery trout to be stocked in local fishing ponds.

Personnel from the Idaho Department of Fish and Game’s Mackay Hatchery have already stocked more than 160 super-sized trout, which average 9½ pounds, in Hayden, Kids Creek and Blue Mountain ponds. About 80 trout were released in Hayden Pond, with 40 going in Kids Creek and 40 in Blue Mountain Pond. The remaining trout, which average between 2 and 5 pounds, will be stocked later this summer and fall.

The giant rainbows were used in the production of trout raised at Clear Springs Foods’ hatchery in Mackay. Referred to as broodstock, these hatchery trout are nearing the end of their usefulness in producing the next generation but will provide anglers some thrilling fishing. The trout limit is six, all species combined.

“A huge thank you to Clear Springs Foods for their generosity,” Kayden Estep, Fish and Game fisheries biologist, said in a statement. “Catching one of these monsters will be a summer highlight, especially for the kids.”

Pond fishing is a great way to introduce kids to the sport, using simple setups like worm/marshmallow combinations or commercial baits like PowerBait or Crave — either near the bottom or below a bobber.

For more information on where fish are stocked locally, how many and when, call 208-756-2271 or go to the Stocking Report page at idfg.idaho.gov/fish/stocking.