Bow Buck

Officially tagged out after I harved this small buck on what I had predetermined to be my last hunt before gun season.  I had a few encounters with bucks that would make you dizzy, with one being an absolute trophy.  I hunt on a private fifty acres in Marathon County that is a phenomenal funnel zone for bucks cruising during the rut, with 7 tree stands and a few good ground blinds.  We noticed most of the bucks were hitting a particular edge that didn't have a stand, so the day before I shot this deer, I moved a stand to that edge.  Jackpot, this buck came to 15 yards, nose down, hot on a doe that moved through a half hour before. 



Bow Doe

Had an unbelievable bow season this year with an rut that produced upwards of 23 different buck sightings, with several close encounters.  Got my confidence going after I laced this doe directly through the thumper. 



God's Playground

Got Lakes?
Welcome to Northern Wisconsin.  Welcome to God's Country.

My Aspirations

My aspirations are not complicated.  I’ll tell it to you now, I intend on catching a true world weight-class record muskie.  Someone please explain to me why this isn’t a possibility.  Detailing all my collegiate and professional education and my personal studies about fish, coupled with my personal water-time (1600 days on the water (I am 28)), I absolutely know that a 70 pound muskie does roam the waters of Northern Wisconsin.   
I think that the growth potential for musky is completely misunderstood, creating a mythical misnomer when the subject is ever brought up.  The potential for fish growth is underrated to the point where it makes me sick.  How is it even possible to say that she does not exist, and not only one, but several record fish?
Isn’t it retarded to think that a record fish once existed and doesn’t anymore?  What has changed?  Nothing!  And there being more fishermen presently is erroneous.
Catching 40”, 50” muskie is considered awesome, and I must agree 100 percent.  But people have to realize very simple ideas about biology.  What makes a creature old?  Answer – not dying.  What does an old creature do?  Answer - keep living.  How do they do that?  Rely on past experience and conditioned responses. 
Past experience, or conditioned response, creates an environment where a successful animal works off maximum body efficiency.  And in terms of giant fish, that relates to ultimate extreme efficiency, or as I like to call it, nearly impossible to catch.  I hope you like the word ‘nearly’.  These extreme big fish target food very differently than do sub-50”ers; they know what’s up.  Could you imagine a 60# musk eating bucktail or suiks her whole life with no consequence?  Nah.  Because a 60# fish isn’t going to exist where people fish, and if by chance she does, she’s not going to eat a lure seen a million times before.
It’s going to exist where people don’t fish.  Not only that, a 60+ pounder only eats during one season of the year, then lays dormant the rest.   They likely eat food starting immediately when the fall surface temperature becomes cold enough to drop and mix with the lower layers of lake…when baitfish find it suitable to seek shallow water, creating an easy seining adventure for the most robust musk.  It becomes an overindulgent slaughter.  
Big fish are big fish for one reason, and that reason is the food supply is such where it is predictable and not expensive on the fishes body.  Less stress = more growth.  I’m not implying that high traffic lakes don’t hold nice muskies, or that every private lake holds a giant fish.  I just want to say that sometimes there is a perfect combination of elements, and I’m excited about that.   
I may not fish for her everyday, and I may not know where she is, but she’s out there.  I am totally convinced that she exists, and am totally consumed by thinking about where.  6/26/2012

One of a kind footage; athletic muskie


I bet Wipfli a beer that I didn't get this action on film, but I was glad to cough up a cold one when I reviewed the footage.  Amazing!  I was only working a five foot trough, pretty much jigging a double dawg just below the surface when this muskie completely missed the lure and its momentum caromed him four feet into the air and into a complete somersault. 

This footage will undoubtedly be edited into an ultra slow motion zoom-in deal on our 2012 compilation video.  I'm almost willing to bet that there is no other footage quite like this. 






Scottie Blades

After a confusing five minutes of following this musk around after it nipped one of my suckers, we finally felt the ski had the suck secured enough to set the hook, and Blades did just that, and taking his muskie virginity with it.

White Pine Growing Through House; Removal

No, this is not an illusion.  These clients actually had their roof constructed around this towering white pine decades ago.  Through the years, they could actually feel the house move during windy days.  I can't believe they stared up at this thing through their sunroof and were able to sleep soundly.  They called Dano's Tree Service to piece the threat down to safety.  Figuratively, no sweat; plenty of sweat, literally.







Forgive my absence, oh faithful reader

Dear Faithful Reader,

I have been the fortunate beneficiary of no internet services for several months, save for scant stints of second-rate coffee shop uploads. 

A life lived apart from monotonous phone handlings and website updates is a style I have continuously found to be most productive in genuinely successful outdoor pursuits, and those journeys of northwoods adventures have nut-shelled my base personality, and ultimately, my true inspirational serenity.

However, the forthcoming days of anticipated uneventful activities, coupled with an internet connection, will put heavy doses of Northwoods Way flavor on your plate.

Hope this is satisfactory, and please forgive.