Hi all happy new year. I’ve been hunting in New York 40 + years but last few years seems the woodchucks have packed up and moved and no where to be seen . I heard pa might be a good place to hunt . Any thoughts thanks .
Here I thought they packed up and moved to New York! The numbers are way down here in western Pennsylvania. My employment has me driving all over the back roads of western Pennsylvania and there will be days go by that I don’t see even one chuck. Don’t see too many hit on the roads either. Lots of ideas why this might be but I don’t know the real reason. Gone are the days when I could go out and shoot 15 in an evening and on a good evening between 20 and 30 on a good farm.
Sounds good thanksKnock on doors and ask but its not near as good here as it use to be. There is either a house of an Amish farm in the middle or end of every field you look at. Try in the northern part of the state first Wellsboro area and around route 6.
Just my .02.
Where are you in NY?
Nyc
The Cortland County/town of Groton area has some..
Thanks buddy I’ll check it out15 years ago, it was a Ground Hog Gold Mine here in eastern PA, namely, northern Berks County. Access was no problem, ground hogs galore!
Then came the overdevelopment and the change in farming practices. Where I once had 8 to 9 farms, I am down to 3. Of those three, less than 50% of the fields are huntable for groundhogs due to changes in farming practices, i.e., planting in strips, planting mostly corn. Gone are the long rolling hay fields of yester year.
Some fellow shooters claim it is still fairly good up around State College, but I cannot attest to that since I never hunted up there.
The only reason I go now around here is to get out in nature, take snooze and enjoy the outdoors. If I get a shot or two, it's a bonus safari.
Here is what I have found out. Us hunters probably blame Coyotes, but any of the wildlife people that I have talked to say that it ISN'T Coyotes. So, I really don't know, but I still blame Coyotes even though "those in the know" disagree with me.I used to hunt numerous farms off rt80 around Milton. Slowly but surely the number of groundhogs continued to diminish. It wasn't hunting that caused the decline but I'm not sure what did. Locals blamed coyotes, plague, pneumonia in spring pups and everything else.
One farmer set conibear traps over the holes and that worked 100% at eliminating the hogs at his place but most farmers don't do that.
That's sort of like the guy that comes along and asks "what's the best load for my <insert cartridge>?". Most of us got that load by doing a lot of work and testing. Too bad that this likely won't even work if one wants to quote loads, as what might be best in one, might not be in another, and then there is the question of whether it is safe in another's firearm.I will take you to my deer spot. My groundhogs farms, nah, lol. I got back into it several years ago. I have been welcomed every place I have asked. About 1 in 4 turn out to be a good spot. Like most things in life, putting in the work usually gives good results.