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August 16, 2008

More on the latest Bigfoot 'news'

OK, so some guys in Georgia found a Bigfoot in the forest. And he was dead. So they took him home and stuck his poor, dead bones in a freezer. And that's where it is right now.

Sure.

The whole story, along with some murky photos, appears on page 6B of Saturday's York Sunday News. Here's the Associated Press version of the story.

Here are some additional layers to the story, as promised in today's Daily Record sports section.

1. The YouTube version of the Patterson-Gimlin film from 1976:

2. For past Bigfoot articles on The Lineup Card, including coverage of the Jacobs photos taken in Pennsylvania last year, click here.

Finally, click here to check out the latest news on Bigfoot, via Google. Many newspapers covered Friday's news conference in California, so you can read all the different perspective on those fellas from Georgia and the hairy beast they supposedly have on ice.


August 5, 2008

Some outdoors blogs you might want to check out

If you're looking for even more news on The Great Outdoors, hunting and fishing, here are some blogs you might want to check out on regular basis:

Lehigh Valley Wild: By Christian Berg of The Morning Call in Allentown

The Redneck Rant: By Jonathan Murren of The Evening Sun in Hanover

Wild about PA by Marcus Schneck of Pennlive.com


July 23, 2008

Searching for snakes can be a bear

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Kelvin Pereira (KP), Sonia McFadden, Christopher Pereira (holding bag containing a black rat snake) and David Mcfadden (holding bag containing a timber rattlesnake)

A few local adventuresome types who attended the 2008 Landisburg Fire Company's annual timber rattlesnake hunt fundraiser got to experience some other wildlife up-close-and-personal.

Area residents Kelvin Pereira (KP), Sonia McFadden, Christopher Pereira and David McFadden drove a short distance from where the rest of their group was hunting on July 19. David left the others to hunt a rugged, rocky open pipeline while the rest of the group waited near the vehicle.

Here's an excerpt from the e-mail sent to us by David:

As Sonia, Christopher and KP lounged inside the truck trying to keep cool, a black bear of gargantuan proportions approached completely unnoticed by all. Only when Sonia caught a glimpse of movement outside her window did she see the bear, which at that point was almost inside the vehicle with them. Sonia and the bear saw each other at the same time and the bear turned to meander up the pipeline.

The bear . . .
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Finish reading 'Searching for snakes can be a bear' »

July 22, 2008

PGC urges hike in license fees

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A state Senate bill that would increase certain hunting license fees beginning in the 2009-10 season received public support Monday from Pennsylvania Game Commission executive director Carl Roe.

Senate Bill 1527 is sponsored by state Sen. Charles T. McIlhinney Jr. (R-Bucks), who is the Senate Game and Fisheries Committee chair.

Finish reading 'PGC urges hike in license fees ' »

July 21, 2008

Bachelor bucks in Beaver County

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This fall's deer season could be strong in at least one area, reports the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
Matt Kramer, the Pennsylvania Game Commission's wildlife conservation officer in Beaver County, said he's noticed several "bachelor groups of better than average bucks" during his travels.
"While these bucks are on friendly terms in the summer months, when the fall rolls around, they will not tolerate each other's company. However, a dispersing buck is one that often falls to the hunter's arrow or shot, so prospects for harvesting a buck in Beaver County look pretty good for those that do their homework and put in the time," he said.

July 3, 2008

Photograph Bigfoot, win a million dollars

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The latest twist in the Sasquatch Saga ...

(for past updates on this story see this and this.)

... is that Field & Stream has come up with the brilliant (marketing-wise) plan of offering $1 million to the first person who takes a verifiable photo of a sasquatch using a trail camera.

Click here for the full details on their contest.

June 16, 2008

Oil prices hitting sportsmen, too

By Walter Brasch
Spectrum Features Syndicate

ELYSBURG -- Registration at the annual Colonial Classic and Pennsylvania State Shoot was down 15-20 percent this year.

The problems are both the increase in the price of gas and the economy says Bruce Murphy, president of the Pennsylvania State Sportsmen's Association, which sponsors one of the nation's largest trap shoot tournaments.

Finish reading 'Oil prices hitting sportsmen, too' »

June 12, 2008

State kills rescued orphan fawn

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I think it's safe to say that this story, from our sister newspaper in Hanover, is going to create a firestorm of controversy...

By KATHARINE HARMON
Evening Sun Reporter

A New Oxford man thought he was saving a fawn when he scooped it up off a road in Maryland and took it home to nurse it back to health after its mother was hit by a car.

William Albert bottle-fed the fawn in his 218 Reba Drive garage and called around to see if any wildlife-rehabilitation centers would take the baby deer.

Albert also called the Pennsylvania Game Commission to help him find a place to send the deer, but when a wildlife officer showed up at his house a short while later, he took the deer and had it killed.

Now, Albert says the officer -- who arrived at the house before Albert did, just 10 minutes after Albert called -- was on his property without his permission or a warrant, and the deer definitely shouldn't have been destroyed.

For the rest of the story, click here to go to the Evening Sun.

June 10, 2008

Snowboarding is most dangerous outdoor activity

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The Associated Press

NEW YORK — More people are hurt snowboarding than any other outdoor activity, accounting for a quarter of emergency room visits, according to the first national study to estimate recreational injuries.

Trailing snowboarding are sledding and hiking, researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report in the journal Wilderness and Environmental Medicine.

The most common problems were broken bones and sprains, accounting for half of all cases. About 7 percent of ER visits were for concussions or other brain injuries.

Finish reading 'Snowboarding is most dangerous outdoor activity' »

May 25, 2008

Some walleye fry stockings halted

The Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission has stopped walleye fry stockings in the Susquehanna, Lehigh and Allegheny rivers on an experimental basis. Fry are young fish in their early stage of life, from one to three weeks old.

“We have been stocking walleye fry in portions of these rivers where spawning habitat was believed to be poor,” stated Dave Miko, PFBC Chief -- Division of Fisheries Management in a news release. “In some of these waters, dams restricted the ability of walleye to move freely throughout the river. However, the recent removal of dams or the improvement of fish passage over these dams has provided walleye with increased access to spawning areas.

“As a result, we think the current level of natural reproduction in these rivers may be capable of sustaining the walleye population and providing the recreational opportunities that anglers have come to expect.”

Finish reading 'Some walleye fry stockings halted ' »

May 15, 2008

Some blog threads never die

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A couple of truly old blog posts here on The Lineup Card are still generating commenting traffic. It's kind of fascinating, really. They just created lives of their own and kept on ticking.

In case you're curious, one is the infamous entry from Nov. 20, 2007, about the harvesting of an albino bear cub. That one has 78 comments and counting. And the other is the "Irked about the York Young Revolution" reader letter from Nov. 19, 2007, which has 60 comments thus far.

April 9, 2008

Deer management to be scrutinized

Pennsylvania's deer hunting management will be scrutinized following unanimous passage of a House resolution earlier this week. The annual deer harvest totals are the subject of fierce debate in Pennsylvania.

The sponsor, Rep. David Levdansky, D-Allegheny, said Pennsylvania Game Commission policies in place for the past five years warrant closer study.

He said advocates and critics of the policies will both benefit from an objective, independent examination on how the deer herd is managed.

Finish reading 'Deer management to be scrutinized' »

March 24, 2008

Readers react to deer harvest

Two of the responses we've received to Sunday's article about the 2007-08 Pennsylvania deer harvest:

Alex Kohl of Red Lion says that simple math explains the situation: I just finished reading the deer management article in the Sunday paper and feel that I had to respond to the ongoing theories about why the deer harvest numbers are down in Pennsylvania.

Let's make this simple. The hunters in this state harvested way too many antlerless deer! If we look back through time over the past 40 years, there is simple arithmetic involved. From 2001 to 2007, we had 84 days of doe hunting. From 1970 to 2000, we had 90 days of doe hunting. This is not rocket science.

With the encouragement of the Game Commission, the hunters in this state shot most of our deer. The allocation of all the bonus antlerless licenses over the past 20 years, combined with all the available days of antlerless hunting and the lack of control from the majority of the hunters created the demise of the white-tailed deer herd in Pennsylvania.

Finish reading 'Readers react to deer harvest' »

March 23, 2008

'If you've had a run-in with an unexplained entity...'

This article on strange phenomena in Derry Township, originally published in Friday's Blairsville Dispatch, is a hoot.

Most of it concerns Stan Gordon, who is "a Greensburg resident who has specialized in researching unexplained happenings in Pennsylvania and beyond since 1959."

Some gems from the article by Jeff Himler:

Finish reading ''If you've had a run-in with an unexplained entity...'' »

March 17, 2008

Game Commission expresses its anger

I suspect this is just about as angry of a stance as you'll ever see the Pennsylvania Game Commission take in an official news release.

The PGC expressed its "extreme disappointment" this morning that there will be no point-of-sale hunting licenses available in 2008, as originally hoped. Contracted company Automated Licensing Systems pretty much gets thrown under the bus in this news release.

What are your thoughts on this? E-mail me at this address.

March 10, 2008

Not much longer until trout season

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Trout season begins in York County on Saturday, March 29. (York County is one of the early-starting counties in Pennsylvania's two-tiered system.)

Read more about trout season here. Get some quick facts about the season here. And go here for information on how to find your local trout-stocking schedules and reports.

December 14, 2007

Slinsky: 'Bring the deer herd back'

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In his latest column, Jim Slinsky of the Outdoor Talk Network has a simple request: "Bring the deer back."

Slinsky's commentary follows:

It is pointless to use this precious space to discuss what a lousy deer season it was. Hunters are calling it was the worst deer season in fifty years. Yes, a few nice deer were harvested, again. However, I will be amazed if our combined buck and doe harvest was 100,000. Although, Special Regs Areas usually post some big numbers and distort the statewide harvest. We shall see how the PGC handles the harvest stats.

Finish reading 'Slinsky: 'Bring the deer herd back'' »

Bigfoot hanging out in Alabama?

Hmm, did that juvenile sasquatch from the Pennsylvania woods take a trip down south?

WTVY News 4 in Dothan, Ala., reported this news last week (you'll want to follow the link to see the photo):

A California-based research team has left the Wiregrass without finding conclusive evidence of Bigfoot. Bigfoot expert Tom Biscardi believes several sightings near the Coffee/Geneva County line were credible. Over the years, there have been several encounters with a large, hairy creature that appears to be half man, half beast.

Biscardi believes there was a pod of Bigfoot heading further south for warmer conditions. At this time, the team is en route to western Pennsylvania following a credible sighting there. The researchers are expected to return to Coffee County in the near future for a follow-up visit.

Finish reading 'Bigfoot hanging out in Alabama?' »