I was raised in PA and if you shot a squirrels nest up there no one would hunt with you again. The idea was the baby squirrels were next years stew.swampgator wrote:If the tree has no hollows, the squirrels will build a large nest in forks of the tree. The outside is usually made of sticks and leaves very much like a bird nest and inside will be lined with leaves and soft grasses. Back about 40 years ago or so, would go hunting about daylight. You could shoot into the nest and then your partner could shoot the squirrel as it tried to escape. Yum! Fried squirrel and gravy with biscuits.
I don't know how many squirrel I shot or ate but it was more an a few. Over the years I got picky I would only shoot squirrels that lived in hickory nut trees. I didn't like the flavor of the meat of squirrels that ate oak acorns.
We never shot or ate a squirrel or rabbit up north until after the first hard freeze. Not sure why but that was how we did. So I don't eat any southern squirrel, no freeze. Today I view them not as game but as fuzzy tail rats and I hate them. Very destructive if they get into your house attic. I cheer the hawk when I see one with a squirrel.
If you want to see something interesting is watching a Hawk hunt morning doves. The doves hunker down close to the ground if they see a hawk. The hawk will fly back and forth screaming until one of the doves take off. Then at about 10 feet off the ground the Hawk hits it. When the hawk hits dove feathers literally explode off the dove. It looks like a firework went off. Feathers everywhere. Both Hawk and dove hit the ground and the hawk readjusts it hold on the dove and off it flies.
I have one Hawk that loves to hunt by our bird feeder and eats the dove up in the pine tree. They tear off the dove wings and throw them down. Everytime I find two dove wings I know a hawk had a meal.