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VAN DEN NORDEN KENNELS 
Ashland, Wisconsin 












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Dept. 6 Bound Brook, New Jersey 


English Setters, Pointers 
and 
Wire Haired Fox Terriers 
Puppies and grown dogs 
of ihe best of breeding 
BLO (Ru SACLE 
Good dogs at stud 
GEO. W. LOVELL 
MIDDLEBORO, MASS. 
Tel. 29-M 


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planning to goin. Send for free 
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q 
In writing to advertisers mention Forest and Stream, 

Photo by Jack Miner 
Canada goose on a woodland pool 
Goose Hunting on the 
Canadian Prairies 
Shooting Over Decoys From Pits Is Good Sport 
By C. J. ARNESON 
HAVE heard of places not so very 
far off, where a party of three or 
four can easily bag fifty or sixty 
geese in a morning’s hunt; but as that 
seems too much like pot-hunting, I pre- 
fer shooting around my home parts, 
where goose-hunting is really a sport. 
There are usually plenty of geese in the 
Fall, but owing to the more settled con- 
dition of our section, they are more 
wary and by no means easy to get at. 
Our home is on the south branch 
of the Saskatchewan river, where the 
geese stop off on their way south from 
the nesting-grounds in the northern 
wilds. The nights they invariably 
spend on the many sandbars in the 
river, but at first dawn of day and 
again about four o’clock in the after- 
noon they fly into the wheat stubble to 
feed, and it is during the’ morning 
flight, that the real shooting is to be 
had. At times they can be found on 
fields close by the river, and again they 
will seek their feed three and four miles 
away, which instability of habit is just 
what makes the hunting rather uncer- 
tain and full of zest. 
Just to recount one morning’s expe- 
rience: On a wonderful October after- 
noon we went north some fifteen miles 
to locate a flock of geese for the next 
morning’s shoot. The air in our alti- 
tude of 2,300 feet was so clearly trans- 
parent that objects thirty-five miles 
It will identify you. 
















and more away stood out clear-cut as 
though only a couple of miles off; the 
a few dots of white, fleecy clouds drift- 
ing along the background of deep blue. 
ble and the vivid green of the Fall rye 
wove patterns in the landscape. The 
trees along the river and around the 
scattered farm houses had taken on 
of gorgeous color, which made one’s” 
heart fairly ache with the love of it 
all. A babel of shorter honks from 
the sandbars in the river, about two 
miles away, told us that the geese were © 
about to lift for their afternoon feed, 
so the car was run into a clump of 
bushes, where we could remain in hid-_ 
ing until the flight was over and the 
geese in the fields. 

NE they were settled, we cared 
no further. They would again fly 
to the sandbars after sundown, but they 
generally feed in the morning at he 
same spot, where they zemamned undigs 
the geese commenced to rise. The 
large, beautiful birds topped the steep 
banks of the river in flocks of only @ 
few or in larger congregations num 
