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Hunting Manitoulin
Island

THE WHITE-TAILED DEER
Where they live.
This deer can be found in southern regions of Canada
in the provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and
Ontario.
It likes the wooded areas where it can hide in the
trees and eat leaves.
Appearance
The white-tailed deer is about 2 meters in length and
1 meter high to its shoulders.
Males have large antlers that make them look taller.
They shed the antlers in the winter but a new set grows in the summer.
In the summer the back and sides of the deer's coat
are brown. In the winter the brown coat turns greyish. The stomach and insides
of the legs are white. The underside of the tail is white.
Food
Deer eat grasses and leaves. They will also eat
mushrooms and berries. In the winter deer nibble on twigs and buds. Deer also
eat the grain that is left in farmers' fields after the harvest.
The white-tailed deer eats its food twice. It has
four stomachs. The deer starts eating early in the morning. It gobbles down
grass and leaves to fill the first stomach. Then while it takes a rest the food
goes into the second stomach where it turns into little balls. Now the deer can
bring the food back up to its mouth and chew it well. The chewed food goes to
the third and fourth stomachs.
The young
One or two fawns are born in May. They are able to
stand and walk shortly after birth. Newborns are protected by a lack of scent.
Their enemies cannot smell them. The mother keeps the young fawns hidden in the
thick bushes. Fawns' coats have hundreds of white spots which disappear when
they are 3 to 4 months old.
The mother does not stay with the fawns but checks up
on them 5 or 6 times during the day to feed them. The young deer stay with
their mothers for one or two years.
A buck fawn (young male ) has bumps on his skull
where the antlers will grow.
Enemies
Man, the wolf, lynx, coyote, bobcat and cougar are
the deer's enemies. Even though a deer is very fast a pack of wolves or coyotes
is able to catch them. The deer cannot run fast if the ground is covered with
deep snow. The deer's thin legs sink into the deep snow.
Protection and adaptations
When the deer is alarmed it raises its tail like a
flag and dashes away. The flash of white fur warns the other deer.
Deer have a keen sense of smell, good hearing and
good eyesight.
With its antlers and sharp hooves the male deer can
sometimes kill a wolf. It will butt the wolf with its horns and then stamp on
it with its feet.
To prepare for the winter deer grow a thick coat and
eat alot of food to store up body fat. If it is a very long and cold winter
deer may gather in small groups for protection from the cold.
Hunting on Manitoulin Island

BLACK BEARS
the smallest North American Bear
RANGE
- found across Canada, including the north
- found in western United States
- lives in wooded areas and mountains
APPEARANCE
- smallest bear in North America
- male can be 2 meters ( 6 ft. ) in length ; 1 meter ( 3 ft. )
to the shoulders
- not all are black, some are dark brown or rusty brown
- brown patch on the nose, stubby tail, sharp claws
ADAPTATION
- able to climb trees, wraps front legs around the trunk
- eats campers' food, goes into trash cans
- sleeps during the winter, might come out on warm days
WINTER
- looks for a den under a fallen tree, in a hollow log, in a
cave.
- may also dig a small hole in a hillside
- females line the den with grass and leaves
- eats alot in the fall to fatten up
- not a true hibernator
- very hungry when it comes out of the den in spring
ENEMIES AND PROTECTION
- was once hunted for sport
- now protected in some areas of Canada and the US
- illegally killed for their bladders, paws, other body
parts
- has few enemies, animals are afraid to attack the bear
- strong, has powerful paws and sharp teeth
- can move fast for a short distance and can swim
THE YOUNG
- two or three cubs
- born every two years born in January or February
- newborns are naked and blind, 15 to 20 cm. long
- spend the winter in the den drinking mother's milk
- by May their coats have grown
- spend second winter with mother in the den
- cubs whine (sounds like a baby crying)
FOOD
- spend most of their time looking for food
- eat plants - twigs, buds, leaves, nuts, roots, fruit, berries,
plant shoots
- also eat ants, honey, fish
- use sharp claws to tear bark from trees and to rip open rotten
logs to look for insects and grubs
- climb trees for birds' eggs and to get to beehives
- sometimes eat small mammals
- catch fish with paws or
- teeth stand up on hind legs to smell

CANADA GOOSE |

CANADIAN GEESE |
CANADA GOOSE
The Canada Goose is the most common of all wild
geese. It is one of the largest waterfowl in North America. Only swans are
larger. The Canada Goose is also called a honker because of the loud, honking
sound that the bird makes. The male is called a gander, the female is a goose
and the young are goslings.
DESCRIPTION
- black head and bill, long black neck and white patches on the
cheeks (white chinstrap)
- black legs and feet (webbed)
- black tail feathers, white underneath
- beige to light brown breast feathers and belly
- grayish-brown to very dark brown on back and upper wings
- size depends on type of Canada Goose (there are 11 species or
groups)
- weight - from 1.4 kg to 7 kg (3 lbs to 15 lbs)
- wingspan - from 90 cm up to 2 m (3 ft to 6 1/2 ft)
HABITAT and RANGE (where Canada Geese are
found)
RANGE
- found throughout North America
- nesting range is from northern Canada (Arctic) to central US
- winter range (where the geese are for the winter) is from
southern Canada to USA and Mexico (places where water does not freeze in winter
and food is available)
HABITAT
- prefers nesting in marshy areas (swamps, bogs, ponds, potholes,
lakes, rivers)
- winter homes : marshlands and lakes near farmers' fields
BEHAVIOR and ADAPTATIONS
ADAPTATIONS
- webbed feet for swimming
- legs are set forward, so geese are able to walk better on land
than ducks and swans
- fluffy down feathers help to protect geese from the cold
- oil glands (near the tail) are used for waterproofing the
feathers
- form flocks to fly south for the winter
- might not migrate if there are open waters and a food supply
for winter
- found in cities (where there is water and food nearby)
BEHAVIOR
- eat by grazing on grasslands or fields; or dipping and dabbling
in water
graze : to walk about eating grass and plants dip and
dabble : put head underwater and come out again, splash around
- fly in a v formation
- have different sounds to communicate (about 13 different calls)
honk (when flying), cluck or cackle (when feeding), hiss (when angry)
- also communicate by body movements
- mate for life; pair stays together as long as both are alive
and well
FLIGHT and MIGRATION
FLIGHT
moulting
- in summer adults moult (lose old flight feathers and grow
- new feathers) new flight feathers grow in time for fall
migration
- cannot fly for 3 or 4 weeks during moulting
how Canada Geese fly
- parents teach the young to fly after new flight feathers have
grown
- usually run along the surface of the water or ground for
takeoff
- movement of wings : downstroke, pull forward, lift upwards,
spread again
- fly with strong and steady wingbeats
- speed 50 to 90 km/hr (30 to 55 m/hr)
- can travel more than 1000 km in a day (over 650 miles)
MIGRATION
When snow falls and the lakes and rivers of the north
freeze over, the geese are unable to swim or find food. The geese migrate to
places where it is warmer and where food is available.
Migrating birds usually follow the same path every
year. These paths are called routes or flyways. The flyways used by the Canada
Goose are : the Atlantic flyway (along the east coast of North America), the
Mississippi flyway (named after the river), the Central flyway (along the Rocky
Mountains) and the Pacific flyway (west of the Rockies).
FALL MIGRATION
- families gather together to form flocks
- as days get shorter, the geese eat more to form a layer of body
fat
- migration begins in late August or early September (depending
on how far north they are)
- flock travels by day or night
- fly in V-shape, often an irregular V-formation, sometimes in
lines
- flying in a V-shape requires less energy, birds can fly longer
distances
- it is easier for others to follow (birds can see what is ahead)
- one of the larger, stronger birds is the leader
- change leaders during flight to give lead bird a rest
- flock lands to feed and rest at familiar places (marshes,
farmers' fields)
- when cloudy they may fly closer to the ground
- Canada Geese spend the winter in southern Canada, the United
States and Mexico.
SPRING MIGRATION
- leave at different times, depending how far north they are
going
- early migrators leave in late January, early February
- fly northward following the melting snowline
- stop often to feed and build up strength
- nesting and egg-laying occurs as soon as geese arrive at
nesting grounds
DANGERS DURING MIGRATION
- exhaustion - too tired from long flight and not enough rest
- starvation - not enough food available
- shot by hunters - hunters wait near fields and ponds where
flocks of geese land to eat and rest
- bad weather - strong winds, thick fog, snowstorms
- flying into things - tv and phone towers, power lines, tall
buildings
NEST-EGGS-GOSLINGS
NEST and EGGS
- arrive on nesting grounds in early spring
- may use same nest every year
- like to nest where there is a good view
- nests are on the ground near water; found on small islands,
river banks, wet grassy areas
- nests are built of grasses, twigs, bark, leaves, reeds and
mosses; lined with down
- photo of a nest
- five to seven white eggs which hatch in about 28 days
- if nesting in the Arctic, eggs hatch later (June)
- gander (male goose) guards the nest
- female leaves only to eat and take a short swim
GOSLINGS
- goslings are yellow-gray or yellow-brown in color with dark
bills
- feathers become gray in about a week
- can walk and swim right after hatching
- family leaves nest soon after young have hatched and heads for
the water where it is safer
- the female leads, goslings next, gander follows from behind
- about half of the goslings survive
- yearlings leave their parents in spring
- young geese find mates and nest when about 3 years old
CANADA GEESE EAT
CANADA GOOSE FOOD
FINDING FOOD
- bills are sensitive, used to "feel around" underwater for
food
- tooth-like spikes around the edges of the bills serve as
strainers
- graze (walk about on a grassy area or a field) or swim and dip
under water for water plants (leaving tail and back end up and out of the
water)
- spend more than 12 hours a day eating
- usually feed early in the morning or late in the afternoon
WHAT DO CANADA GEESE EAT?
- on land - grasses, marsh grass, berries, seeds
- in water - pond plants, tubers, roots, algae
- also feed on crops like clover, alfalfa, wheat, rye, corn,
barley, oats and grain left in farmers' fields after the harvest
ENEMIES and PROTECTION
CANADA GOOSE ENEMIES and PROTECTION
ENEMIES
- eggs are eaten by raccoons, foxes, skunks, weasels, crows,
gulls
- goslings are prey for larger birds (eagles, owls)
- wolves, foxes, coyotes and bald eagles can kill adult geese
- hunters shoot geese
PROTECTION
- have guard geese to warn the flock of dangers when grazing in
fields
- attack by hissing and flapping wings, may bite
- try to chase enemy away
- pretend to have a broken wing to lure enemies away from
goslings
- nests built on small islands provide better protection from
some enemies
OTHER INTERESTING FACTS CANADA GOOSE
OTHER INTERESTING FACTS
- There are at least eleven different species of Canada
geese.
- The species differ in size, length of neck, body shape and
voice (type of honk).
- The smallest is the Cackling Canada Goose which weighs about
1.4 kg (3 pounds) and are just slightly larger than a Mallard duck. It lives in
the Arctic region.
- The largest is the Giant Canada Goose which weighs about 7 kg (
15 pounds).
- Canada Geese are protected by hunting regulations. Governments
are involved in the saving the wetlands and providing areas for resting and
feeding. The geese were re-introduced in some parts of the US.
- Aleutian Canada Geese are listed as threatened. Many were
killed because of a large population of Arctic foxes and red foxes in their
nesting areas in the north (Alaska).
- Canada Geese have become problems in towns and cities. They
inhabit parks and golf courses, eat the grass and leave droppings everywhere.
If people get too close to the goslings, the parents may attack.
Hunting on Manitoulin Island
Mac's Camp is the place to stay for the fall Deer
Hunt. White Tail Deer are plentiful on Manitoulin Island, a hunter can be
assured of a successful hunt.
Macs Camp is located in hunting area 43B, which
has a large number of deer per square mile. Right behind the camp is 39 square
miles of forest, prime-hunting territory. We offer tree stand hunting on over
1000 acres within walking distance of the camp.
Our area continues to produce Trophy Bucks resulting
in an exciting hunting experience. Camper Bruce Cairncross has hunted with us
the past few years and bagged 2 great deer. One Big Bruin weighed in at 236
pounds field dressed, was 12 points and scored 161.
We Offer:
- Bow and Crossbow hunting only
- A 6 - day hunting Package
- Limit 1 deer per hunter
- Comfortable housekeeping cottages with hot showers
- No extra charge for Trophies
- Boat & motor for the duration of your hunt for some great
bass, pike & perch fishing
Not Included:
- Meals (restaurants nearby) Bring Groceries
- Trophy care
- Canadian Taxes
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2005 Award Media All
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© 2005 Mac's Camps and Cottages on Manitoulin Island A Canadian Adventure
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