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| You Are Here: | Game & Fish >> Alabama >> Hunting >> Dove Hunting | ||||
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Bama's Dove Season
The opening of dove season is fast approaching. If you have kids, the Alabama DWFF has a program that should spark your interest. (September 2009)
Four doves came across the cut corn field at blistering speeds. Darting and rolling, diving and climbing, they resembled a World War I dogfight in progress. "Here they come," I whispered, as I watched my dad's head twisting back and forth. Just as the birds came within range, he fired his old double-barrel 20-gauge twice, missing all four birds. "Dadjimmit," Pop said with a frown, as he quickly broke the shotgun open. The gun spat out the paper-hulled shells, and he quickly reloaded as another dove headed straight for our stand. Pop put the 20-gauge together, locked it and mounted his gun with steely-eyed determination. Leading the dove slightly, he squeezed the trigger. The bird cartwheeled through the air. "I'll go get him," I yelled. As fast as my 8-year-old legs could carry me, I sprinted for the downed dove. Retrieving the bird, it added to the pile of other doves my dad had taken. Thirty years later, I heard, "You got it, Pop!" as my young son, John, sprinted across a dove field to pick up a bird I'd just downed. Although younger, he often beat his sister, Kate, to the doves. "John, you got the last bird. It's my turn to pick up the dove," she'd whine. This fall, I'll have a whole flock of new dove retrievers by my side -- grandsons Conner and Bennett, along with granddaughters, Cameron, Emma Grace, Amy Beth and Abbey. Time passes quickly, but the Southern tradition of dove hunting continues to withstand the test of time. It is woven into the fabric of many Alabama families. Thanks to the efforts of the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Division of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries and its Youth Dove Hunt programs, that close-knit connection is likely to continue. As land to hunt all across the state shrinks, in cooperation with the DWFF, more landowners and hunting clubs have opened their fields for youth dove hunting. That insures more adults can take another generation or two of Cotton State youngsters into the field when the leaves change colors. PICKING A DOVE FIELD If you don't have kids to take to a shoot, or simply prefer more adult camaraderie, you may have to go to a hunt on a commercial field. If so, there are a couple of things to look for in their ad or to ask the person putting on the shoot. First, has the field been checked by the local conservation officer from the DCNR? Also, will an officer be dropping by during the hunt to check licenses, plugs in the guns and bag limits? If the answer to those is affirmative, odds are the field is legal. WHERE ARE THE BIRDS? |
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