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Forest grouse hunt looks promising this fall

By UTAH DIVISION OF WILDLIFE RESOURCES

It looks like mild conditions helped adult forest grouse in Utah last winter. And the same dry, mild conditions can help you as a hunter: finding areas that are greener than surrounding areas should put you on birds this year.
Jason Robinson, upland game coordinator for the Division of Wildlife Resources, says reports from DWR field biologists indicate the number of forest grouse is average—or, in the case of dusky grouse, slightly above average—going into this fall’s hunt.
Robinson says mild temperatures and a lack of snow allowed plenty of adult birds to survive the winter and enter the spring breeding season in good condition. Once hatched, though, their chicks faced tough conditions.
“Dry conditions meant less water,” Robinson says, “and less water meant fewer forbs and insects for the chicks to eat. Chick survival was likely down this year.”
Despite fewer young birds, plenty of adult grouse are available to hunt. “I think this fall’s hunt will be a good one,” says Robinson, an avid forest grouse hunter. “Finding areas that are greener than surrounding areas, and then focusing your efforts in those areas, will be the key to taking birds this year.”
Utah’s forest grouse hunt starts Sept. 1. Ruffed grouse are found on mountain ranges extending from the Idaho border south to Fish Lake and the north and south slopes of the Uinta Mountains extending east to the Colorado border. Dusky grouse are more widespread: any pine, fir or spruce forest above 7,000 feet in elevation likely has dusky grouse in it.
Maps that show where dusky and ruffed grouse live in Utah—and more information about the birds themselves—is available on pages 33 and 44 of the 2018 – 2019 Utah Upland Game and Turkey Guidebook. You can get the free guidebook at www.wildlife.utah.gov/guidebooks.
Once you’ve put yourself in the right areas in the state, Robinson provides tips to help you find birds:
Ruffed grouse
Tip 1 – Look for Aspen trees and thick cover.
To find ruffed grouse, scan the forest, looking for stands of white-trunked aspen trees. Once you’ve spotted a stand, head for it. If ruffed grouse are in the area, you’ll find them in the aspen tree stand or in pine, maple or oak tree forest that’s close to the aspen trees.
All aspen stands aren’t created equal, though. The thicker the cover in the stand, the more likely it harbors ruffed grouse. “Ruffed grouse live in cover that’s thicker than many hunters expect or want to hunt in,” he says. “They love thick cover.”
Dusky grouse
Tip 1 – Move higher as the season progresses.
Dusky grouse do something most wildlife species don’t: as conditions get harsher, dusky grouse move higher in elevation.
In early September, you’ll usually find duskies in aspen, pine, fir or spruce tree stands that have a thick understory.
An understory that includes snowberries, serviceberries and other types of berries is especially attractive.
By October, the birds have climbed to ridgelines dotted with pine, fir or spruce trees. Then, starting about Nov. 1 and continuing through the end of the season, dusky grouse will be 9,000 to 10,000 feet in elevation. “During the last part of the season,” Robinson says, “dusky grouse feed entirely on needles of pine, fir or spruce trees. And they zero in on areas that have certain types of trees. Douglas fir trees are their favorite tree at the end of the hunting season.”

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