Groundhog "season"

WV Hitman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 16, 2020
Messages
184
Location
eastern WV
I get bored each winter for 2 months. I usually start looking for my furry friends on 2/21. This year it was sunny & in the 50s. Went at a large chicken house complex that has lots of groundhog holes on the periphery. Walked around them with my BogPod rest with PSR handgun rest. Carried my Taurus Raging Bull .41 Mag (don't own any rifles). Soon I saw a 'hog digging out his hole. I set up at 41 yds. When he stopped to rest I put a 210 gr. Horn. XTP through both shoulders.
Next I went to the local airport where I've been animal control for 35+ years. Saw one at 129 & 186. Got both of them with my .223 Contender and a 40 gr. Horn. VMax. A good start to the year. Makes my lifetime handgun groundhog total 15,677.
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We are getting pretty close maybe first couple will pop out in a month or so. Myself and a few others (major minority LOL) do not shoot any until the pups are out for a short time. I enjoy being able to shoot them, so why not let them reproduce and get to going before knocking them off. I have a few farmers who let us shoot them, and they always shake their head and make comments to me. It kinda hurts my feeler when they call me names and make fun of me for being too soft. Luckily they still let me thin them down every year, and if timed right the left over go in for the summer. Out of sight out of mind.
 
We are getting pretty close maybe first couple will pop out in a month or so. Myself and a few others (major minority LOL) do not shoot any until the pups are out for a short time. I enjoy being able to shoot them, so why not let them reproduce and get to going before knocking them off. I have a few farmers who let us shoot them, and they always shake their head and make comments to me. It kinda hurts my feeler when they call me names and make fun of me for being too soft. Luckily they still let me thin them down every year, and if timed right the left over go in for the summer. Out of sight out of mind.
Same here, we always believed in not shooting until the young were weened, been practicing this since the 1970s.
Purely from a greedy point because we wanted plenty of targets around for later in the year.
To each, their own. YMMV
 
98% of the ones I shoot now are males. They have been mating for a while. Hunted one big farm for 20+ years. Groundhogs did not disappear until the coyotes moved in. Always see lots of little ones in early May.
Been hunting on the airport for 35+ years. Still killing them regularly.
I stop hunting groundhogs 5/15 each year, then go to ID to work on rockchucks. Those farmers say kill them all or don't come back. I hunt 6-7 days there. Last year was the worst year, killed 279( had a hard freeze that killed a lot). Two years ago killed 479 with my handguns.
 
98% of the ones I shoot now are males. They have been mating for a while. Hunted one big farm for 20+ years. Groundhogs did not disappear until the coyotes moved in. Always see lots of little ones in early May.
Been hunting on the airport for 35+ years. Still killing them regularly.
I stop hunting groundhogs 5/15 each year, then go to ID to work on rockchucks. Those farmers say kill them all or don't come back. I hunt 6-7 days there. Last year was the worst year, killed 279( had a hard freeze that killed a lot). Two years ago killed 479 with my handguns.

As a working man, I still managed to hunt groundhogs once a week all spring, summer and early fall. I've killed an awful lot of groundhogs over the years. I never kept track of the numbers but there's one thing that I'm sure of - I was never in your league.

Taking 15,000 groundhogs is just an unbelievable achievement. CONGRATULATIONS
 
I have hunted groundhogs since 1970...the start of my long range passion. Like others here, I always forced myself to wait until June to shoot any so that I would not leave starving babies in the hole.

I went to Ohio to shoot groundhogs with a commercial guide service (Mike at North Central Ohio Varmint Express) and learned a LOT about groundhog biology and behavior. We also shot quite a few groundhogs.

One thing I learned is that nursing females stay in the den with the babies until they are weaned. When she finally comes out, they come out with her and within a few days, she will run them off, forcing them to leave her territory.

I never knew any of that.

The process is that in late summer, the female groundhog will fatten herself up and will also put away dried grass ("hay") in a spare chamber in the multi-chambered burrow. When the female goes down for the winter, she has not yet been bred.

In February and early March, males come up and look for females (hence 'Groundhog Day'), visiting burrows and sniff-checking for eligible females. When the male finds a female, he will mate with her in her den, then leave her, moving on to look for other females.

The fertilized female will sleep during gestation and when the babies are born, she will live on accumulated fat reserves and the dried grass she has put away. She stays underground with the babies until they are weaned.

This means that the groundhogs one sees early in the season are most likely either males or dry females. Killing either of them then has no effect on the young of the year or nursing females.

In late May and early June around here (MD/PA/VA/WV), the mothers and babies appear and the little guys are fully weaned and independent.

Mike books trips almost year-round and when setting up dates, I asked him about shooting them too early, which led to him explaining all this. He does this for a living and would probably like to conserve his resources by not killing nursing females.

I didn't fully believe this at first, but after my trips with Mike, I started shooting groundhogs here as soon as they started appearing in the spring and found them to be either males or dry females. I never got a female with signs of nursing (swollen mammaries/no hair around nipples) until I started seeing young ones out too.

I really regretted my previous habit of waiting, because by the time June rolls around, a lot of the grass and vegetation is getting tall enough to make spotting them difficult. I had passed on MANY opportunities to hunt them early.
 
Yeah, I realized all of this from my 50+ years of persuing groundhogs. I know the behavior of my locals, when they come out on each farm.
I've listened to them communicating They have a definite warning whistle & I discovered a "who are you whistle". I've learned this. If I approach a hole within whistling distance & use it (with me not being seen or shots fired) I can bring out a groundhog about 60% of the time. I use my revolvers & semiautos for this.
I also use whatever gun I'm using on big game hunts on my local 'hogs. Makes me a much better shot on those hunts. Ever see a 'hog shot with a .416 Taylor Encore handgun? I did 20+ with mine offhand, then had no problem taking my charging lion at 30 yards, charging brown bear at 25 yards, & charging elephant at 12 yards.
Groundhog hunting has made me the shot that I am. I'll never give it up.
 
I have hunted groundhogs since 1970...the start of my long range passion. Like others here, I always forced myself to wait until June to shoot any so that I would not leave starving babies in the hole.

I went to Ohio to shoot groundhogs with a commercial guide service (Mike at North Central Ohio Varmint Express) and learned a LOT about groundhog biology and behavior. We also shot quite a few groundhogs.

One thing I learned is that nursing females stay in the den with the babies until they are weaned. When she finally comes out, they come out with her and within a few days, she will run them off, forcing them to leave her territory.

I never knew any of that.

The process is that in late summer, the female groundhog will fatten herself up and will also put away dried grass ("hay") in a spare chamber in the multi-chambered burrow. When the female goes down for the winter, she has not yet been bred.

In February and early March, males come up and look for females (hence 'Groundhog Day'), visiting burrows and sniff-checking for eligible females. When the male finds a female, he will mate with her in her den, then leave her, moving on to look for other females.

The fertilized female will sleep during gestation and when the babies are born, she will live on accumulated fat reserves and the dried grass she has put away. She stays underground with the babies until they are weaned.

This means that the groundhogs one sees early in the season are most likely either males or dry females. Killing either of them then has no effect on the young of the year or nursing females.

In late May and early June around here (MD/PA/VA/WV), the mothers and babies appear and the little guys are fully weaned and independent.

Mike books trips almost year-round and when setting up dates, I asked him about shooting them too early, which led to him explaining all this. He does this for a living and would probably like to conserve his resources by not killing nursing females.

I didn't fully believe this at first, but after my trips with Mike, I started shooting groundhogs here as soon as they started appearing in the spring and found them to be either males or dry females. I never got a female with signs of nursing (swollen mammaries/no hair around nipples) until I started seeing young ones out too.

I really regretted my previous habit of waiting, because by the time June rolls around, a lot of the grass and vegetation is getting tall enough to make spotting them difficult. I had passed on MANY opportunities to hunt them early.
Thank you for explaining this to us.
 
I think I like hunting ground hogs the most. Challenging and fun and no real work to do after you pull the trigger. When I was in graduate school back in the 90's I hunted them a lot in west/central PA. It's really exciting to hunt them with the hay/grass about 10" high, just casually walking the wood line. Sometimes, they would pop up 20 yards away and BLAM!! Or, I'd rest the rifle on a fence post and glass the bald spots in the early soy bean season where I knew they were munching on the crop. When the grass was shorter, I had alot of luck in a light rain because I guess they would lick the rain off the grass to get water if their dens were too far from a creek or stream.
 
Here's 32 of 64 rockchucks I killed 2 years ago in 2 1/2 hours, the year I killed 479. Farmers are getting to like me.
.223 Contender, 40 gr. Nos. BTs from 150-275 yards. One day later only 3 bodies were left-buzzards, eagles, coyotes, badgers.View attachment 546555

You must live in groundhog heaven!
 
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