Hunters find scarcity of doves on first day of season
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Posted 7:36AM on Monday, September 9, 2002
DEXTER, Ga. - James Malone sat in the shade, talked about football and waited on the first day of dove hunting season.<br>
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But no doves were spotted against the clear blue sky at Malone's 20-acre field in Laurens County on Saturday.<br>
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"That's just the way it goes sometimes," Malone said. "We'll just wait until it cools off some. Maybe they'll show up."<br>
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The 20 hunters didn't seem to mind too much. Dove hunting is more similar to fishing than deer hunting in that it's a sport built on camaraderie. Dove hunters shoot in packs, trade a few insults and then spread out around the field. Deer hunting is more of a solitary sport.<br>
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"It's all about having fun," said Kenny Stewart. "If you shoot some, fine. If you don't, you still have a good time."<br>
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The group tried to stay patient, waiting around the field for a few hours with no doves in sight. They know that things can change quickly.<br>
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Dove hunting isn't easy. Dedicated hunters plant seed crops to attract the birds, and even that doesn't always work.<br>
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When the birds come, they have to be within about 40 yards to be in range. Anything beyond that is considered a lucky shot.<br>
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Doves aren't easy to distinguish, either - they look a lot like other small birds. Hunters say they learn to tell the difference.<br>
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"The first 'dove' I ever shot was a mocking bird," Joe Millican quipped.<br>
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Many hunters will pay $50 to a landowner for a day at the dove field. But Malone invited friends and family, and didn't charge them.<br>
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Even for $50 a day and a growing number of farmers cashing in on the dove market, there still aren't enough fields to meet demand.<br>
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Hunters often prefer hunting deer, but doves are a good warmup, said Scotty Vann, while stopped at a Dublin sporting goods store on the way to a hunt.<br>
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"This is just something to get you started," Vann said.<br>
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