There are some great hunting opportunities in the Northstate, California region. Game can include bear, quail, pig, deer and turkey just to name a few and it's a great trip for all skill levels and ages.
Here are the top places to hunt and what accommodations are available for visitors:
Rawhide West http://www.rawhidewest.com/
This location offers guided hunts and the game include deer (black-tail), turkey, quail and pig. Rawhide west is about 120 miles from Oregon and is known for its ample wildlife and fish. Accommodations are available at the hunting ranch or in town, and hunters are guaranteed an amazing hunting experience.
Acorn Ridge Outfitters http://www.acornridgeoutfitters.com/
Acorn Ridge Outfitters deluxe guided hunting packages offer a memorable experience with turkey, wild pig, deer and varmint game hunting. They offer everything from motel accommodations and dining reservations to a shuttle service to and from the airport. Special packages and discounts are available for US veterans, father/son and father/daughter hunting excursions.
Tight Lines Guide Service www.fishtightlines.com/site/Home.html
At Tight Lines Guide Service, visitors can hunt and fish on the same vacation with the "Cast & Blast" package. The guided tours include morning rainbow trout fishing, lunch and then an afternoon filled with duck hunting. The package includes all tackle and equipment. There are no overnight accommodations provided.
Oasis Springs Fly Fishing & Game Lodge http://www.oasisflyfishing.com/
This game lodge provides visitors with quail, chukar and pheasant game hunting. Located on a 3,000 acre private game preserve, hunters will delight in watching the dogs "point and flush" out the game. They offer a superb "No Bag Limit or Per Bird Prices " mixed bag wing shooting and a Wild Mountain and Valley Quail hunt. Accommodations are available at the lodge.
Whifflemaster Taxidermy and Guide Service http://whifflemaster.com/
Whifflemaster offers hunters guided wild pig, duck and goose hunts and waterfowl and bird taxidermy. There are no accommodations available on site, but visitors can stay in an adjoining county.
RATLDM Ranch http://www.huntingtop10.com/outfitters/ca/caof11/index.html
Located in Susanville, CA, RATLDM Ranch offers guided black bear, antelope, deer (both mule and black tail) and elk hunts. They do not charge a trophy fee and provide overnight accommodations in their historic, yet modern, Wells Fargo State Stop.
Blake's Guide Service http://www.blakesguideservice.com/
Blake’s guide service offers goose hunting at its finest, with guided hunts for the 750,000 Ross, Snows and Speck geese that migrate here yearly from the Arctic Ocean. A short ride from the Sacramento airport, visitors can stay in their four star accommodations and experience an amazing and professional hunting experience.
G&J Outdoors http://www.gandjoutdoors.com/
Visitors to G&J Outdoors can choose from an array of guided hunting trips that include turkey, deer, elk and antelope game hunting. In addition, hunters can go on a predator, coyote or mountain lion hunt and head upland for some bird hunting (turkey and wild chukar). Although there a no accommodations on the grounds, visitors can stay in town at a number of hotels and motels.
All hunting locations abide by California hunting laws are and required to take a safety guidelines hunter safety course for California.
Monday, December 5, 2011
Monday, September 12, 2011
Subject: Philosophy 101 – with Beer
The following is one of my favorites - I don't know who wrote it but they have it right in my opinion. Hope you like it -- Get out there!
A philosophy professor stood before his class and had some items in front of him. When the class began, wordlessly he picked up a very large and empty mayonnaise jar and proceeded to fill it with rocks about 2'' in diameter.
He then asked the students if the jar was full. They agreed that it was. So the professor then picked up a box of pebbles and poured them into the jar. He shook the jar lightly. The pebbles, of course, rolled into the open areas between the rocks.
He then asked the students again if the jar was full. They agreed it was. The professor picked up a box of sand and poured it into the jar. Of course, the sand filled up everything else. He then asked once more if the jar was full. The students responded with a unanimous –Yes!
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Strategies for Moving Water
The following is courtesy of Andrew Harris - Fly Fishing Guide/Author. Please contact Andrew at www.confluenceoutfitters.com or www.andrewharrisflyfishing.com
As we fly fishers accumulate knowledge and experience on the water, we pass through alternating stages of rapid growth and stagnation. We’ll learn a new skill that allows us to explore new kinds of water, then struggle for several trips or maybe several seasons until we make the next breakthrough in technique or understanding. One of the most frustrating challenges occurs when an angler is first confronted with a type of stream that is significantly different from the water with which he or she is familiar. For me, the frustration began when I made the leap from fishing small freestone streams to fishing spring creeks and tailwaters. The yellow humpies and Montana stone nymphs that easily fooled trout on the tributaries to the Middle Fork Feather River would rarely tempt a fish on Hat Creek or the Lower Sac.
As we fly fishers accumulate knowledge and experience on the water, we pass through alternating stages of rapid growth and stagnation. We’ll learn a new skill that allows us to explore new kinds of water, then struggle for several trips or maybe several seasons until we make the next breakthrough in technique or understanding. One of the most frustrating challenges occurs when an angler is first confronted with a type of stream that is significantly different from the water with which he or she is familiar. For me, the frustration began when I made the leap from fishing small freestone streams to fishing spring creeks and tailwaters. The yellow humpies and Montana stone nymphs that easily fooled trout on the tributaries to the Middle Fork Feather River would rarely tempt a fish on Hat Creek or the Lower Sac.
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Fly Fishing the Lower Sacramento, Spring 2010
I do not know these folks but it is a great display of the Sac River and the fishing that we have here
Monday, July 12, 2010
Lassen Peak Trail Rehabilitation Project Kickoff Event
July 9, 2010
For Immediate Release
Darlene M. Koontz
(530) 595-4444, ext. 5101
Lassen Volcanic National Park and the Lassen Park Foundation will host the
Lassen Peak Trail Rehabilitation Project at the ‘Reach the Peak’ kickoff
event on July 17 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Lassen Peak parking lot.
“The park trail crew is hard at work stabilizing and mitigating safety
hazards as snow continues to melt from Lassen Peak” stated Superintendent
Darlene M. Koontz. “We anticipate opening the full trail to the summit
July16, just in time for the celebration” added Koontz.
Special interpretive programs will be offered at 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 2 p.m.
A presentation by Superintendent Darlene M. Koontz and Lassen Park
Foundation Chairman John Koeberer will begin at noon followed by cake and
refreshments.
Reach the Peak project partners, Lassen Park Foundation, Lassen
Association, California Guest Services, and California Conservation Corps,
will host informational booths during the event.
The Reach the Peak Trail Rehabilitation Project will be a five-year project
to widen sections of the peak trail to accommodate visitor traffic,
construct a new loop route around the crater providing opportunities to
interpret geology and scenery while reducing resource damage to sensitive
vegetation, and install a new evaporator toilet. The final step will
construct a trail linking the Manzanita Creek Trail to the peak parking lot
and improve the Manzanita Creek trailhead parking.
During trail work, closures of the Lassen Peak Trail are possible at any
time without notice. Most of the work on the trail will take place Monday
through Thursday. On these days, the trail will be closed at the
“Grandview” area, approximately 1.3 miles from the peak parking area.
Once the trail opens for the season, it will be open to the summit Friday
through Sunday, except while the California Conservation Corps assists with
the restoration July 28 to August 4, August 11 to 18 and August 25 to
September 1.
Trail accessibility information is available on the park website at
http://www.nps.gov/lavo/parkmgmt/current-lassen-peak-trail-status.htm .
For more information about the Reach the Peak kickoff event, please contact
Kara Roll at (530) 595-4444 x5101. For additional park information, visit
the park website at www.nps.gov/lavo or call (530) 595-4480.
-NPS-
For Immediate Release
Darlene M. Koontz
(530) 595-4444, ext. 5101
Lassen Volcanic National Park and the Lassen Park Foundation will host the
Lassen Peak Trail Rehabilitation Project at the ‘Reach the Peak’ kickoff
event on July 17 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Lassen Peak parking lot.
“The park trail crew is hard at work stabilizing and mitigating safety
hazards as snow continues to melt from Lassen Peak” stated Superintendent
Darlene M. Koontz. “We anticipate opening the full trail to the summit
July16, just in time for the celebration” added Koontz.
Special interpretive programs will be offered at 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 2 p.m.
A presentation by Superintendent Darlene M. Koontz and Lassen Park
Foundation Chairman John Koeberer will begin at noon followed by cake and
refreshments.
Reach the Peak project partners, Lassen Park Foundation, Lassen
Association, California Guest Services, and California Conservation Corps,
will host informational booths during the event.
The Reach the Peak Trail Rehabilitation Project will be a five-year project
to widen sections of the peak trail to accommodate visitor traffic,
construct a new loop route around the crater providing opportunities to
interpret geology and scenery while reducing resource damage to sensitive
vegetation, and install a new evaporator toilet. The final step will
construct a trail linking the Manzanita Creek Trail to the peak parking lot
and improve the Manzanita Creek trailhead parking.
During trail work, closures of the Lassen Peak Trail are possible at any
time without notice. Most of the work on the trail will take place Monday
through Thursday. On these days, the trail will be closed at the
“Grandview” area, approximately 1.3 miles from the peak parking area.
Once the trail opens for the season, it will be open to the summit Friday
through Sunday, except while the California Conservation Corps assists with
the restoration July 28 to August 4, August 11 to 18 and August 25 to
September 1.
Trail accessibility information is available on the park website at
http://www.nps.gov/lavo/parkmgmt/current-lassen-peak-trail-status.htm .
For more information about the Reach the Peak kickoff event, please contact
Kara Roll at (530) 595-4444 x5101. For additional park information, visit
the park website at www.nps.gov/lavo or call (530) 595-4480.
-NPS-
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Mendocino Blues
This article submitted to Northstate Outdoors by Meade Fischer who can be reached at tripper@ebold.com
Something's lost when something's gained. For example, I finally
have some disposable income as opposed to being ill disposed to
having income. As a result, I can afford a state park or private
camp ground, not that I'm acclimated to actually paying for one.
Case in point is my almost annual trip to the Mendocino coast.
I can afford, assuming they are not full, to stay at one of the
three state parks in the area. In prior years, that would have
upset my travel budget for the summer. So, state parks are nice,
clean, have restrooms and showers and noisy neighbors. They also
cost plenty. Bottom line is convenient but kind of mundane.
Something's lost when something's gained. For example, I finally
have some disposable income as opposed to being ill disposed to
having income. As a result, I can afford a state park or private
camp ground, not that I'm acclimated to actually paying for one.
Case in point is my almost annual trip to the Mendocino coast.
I can afford, assuming they are not full, to stay at one of the
three state parks in the area. In prior years, that would have
upset my travel budget for the summer. So, state parks are nice,
clean, have restrooms and showers and noisy neighbors. They also
cost plenty. Bottom line is convenient but kind of mundane.
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
THE BASICS OF SUCCESSFUL GOLD MINING
This article submitted to Northstate Outdoors by Dave McCracken who can be reached at new49ers@goldgold.com or http://www.goldgold.com/
During the Group Mining Projects and workshops we conduct each season, I always like to start by discussing the most important and fundamental ingredient in successful gold mining. That basic ingredient is you, yourself!
During the Group Mining Projects and workshops we conduct each season, I always like to start by discussing the most important and fundamental ingredient in successful gold mining. That basic ingredient is you, yourself!
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