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4-H Extension Corner
Growing our leaders of tomorrow …
One of the highest honors for any 4-H member is to become a State Ambassador. The 4-H Ambassadors Program gives teen leaders many opportunities to enhance their leadership, citizenship and communication skills, as they become the faces of Alabama 4-H.
Alabama has 27 young people who currently serve as 4-H Ambassadors. These students met rigorous standards to attain this position. Each had completed at least one full club year as an active, participating 4-H member, who had demonstrated leadership in a variety of youth development activities. The Ambassador Program also has age requirements. Each student had to be at least 14 years old by January 1 of the starting term year and be a high school sophomore, junior, or senior.
Becoming a State 4-H Ambassador is an honor, but it carries many responsibilities. Ambassadors must not only have knowledge of the total Alabama 4-H Youth Development Program, but they also must have experience in planning and delivering events and activities. They must demonstrate a commit-
(L to R) First Row: Cami Cleveland, Kalen Alexander, Alana New, William McCollum, Sierra Bennett and Suzie Feist Middle Row: Rachel Allen, Olevia Rice, Abigail Lee, Blair Wyrosdick, Breanna Blackman, Willow Sayles, Leah Kate Owens, Jeremy Speros Back Row: Luke Stephens, Rebecca Rasbury, Hunter Garland, Neely Stewart, Colton Cook, Gavin Yocom, Aiden Mackenzie and Blake Harris (Not pictured: Anna-Kathryn Robinson, Kristen Walker, Briley Newman, Jade Gartman and Katie Rasbury)
Colton Cook serves as President of the Alabama State 4-H Ambassadors for 2021. He believes that becoming a State officer was a hands-on masterclass in responsibility and communication, two of the most important skills for future employment. Neely Stewart serves as Vice President of the Alabama State 4-H Ambassadors. She gained both leadership skills and lifelong friendships with her position, which gave her many opportunities to help others.
ment to community service and volunteerism by working with other youth and adults, individually and as a team member.
State Ambassadors enjoy many benefits. They are given numerous opportunities to further develop leadership, communication, and organizational skills. These students gain a greater understanding of the 4-H Youth Development Program by planning, implementing and participating in statewide educational, leadership and service-related programs. Each Ambassador also represents 4-H and Alabama as a 4-H Ambassador Delegate.
Ambassadors support the mission and vision of Alabama 4-H, as well as various local, county, regional, and statewide programs and activities through public presentations, leadership development opportunities and community service. They assist with an innovative and high-profile Ambassador Community Service Project and provide leadership for the Midwinter Teen Leadership Retreat, Alabama 4-H State Competitive Events Day and other 4-H events, as assigned.
Being chosen as a State Ambassador requires a high level of commitment, but assuming a State Ambassador Officer position requires even more dedication.
For Colton Cook, President of the 2021 Alabama State Ambassadors, 4-H was a place to belong. “As an Ambassador, I wanted to provide that safe haven for people who felt like outsiders,” Colton stated, “but as President, I could do more. Being State Ambassador President gives me a platform to promote 4-H all across our wonderful state.”
Neely Stewart, who serves as Alabama’s State
Ambassador Vice President, agreed. “I love helping others, ” she explained. “This position allows me to do that often. I wanted to lead my fellow Ambassadors well and listen to their new suggestions and ideas.”
For Colton Cook, being a State Ambassador officer was a hands-on master class in responsibility and communication, two of the most important skills for future employment.
“All the Ambassadors are from every corner of the state, so it is vitally important that we stay in touch with one another,” he added. “Since we are so far apart, it’s even more important that the advisors know that each of us can do our part.”
Colton offered some advice to younger 4-H members, who might aspire to becoming an Ambassador one day: “Get involved. Start out small. Be an officer in your local 4-H club; be on your school’s student council or SGA; be on your county’s youth council. All of these leadership opportunities will lead to bigger and better opportunities.”
“I encourage any 4-H’er to be a State Ambassador, because of the leadership skills and lifelong friendships it provides,” said Neely Stewart. “I am forever grateful to Alabama 4-H for how it has shaped me into the leader I am today.”
June State Ambassador Planning meeting
Whitetails are always using their extremely sensitive smell to their advantage and will not spend a great deal of time in an area where the air currents aren’t to their advantage. (Photo Credit: Lynn Bystrom)
Listen to the Breeze
Structure, Wind and Treestand Placement
“Pink-light” was breaking over the horizon and the timber was waking up around me. I was perched in a treestand overlooking eight huge, fresh scrapes, but I puffed my “wind-checker” and watched the particles go floating off exactly where I didn’t expect them to. I considered getting out of my setup so as not to foul the area – but it was too late. Some dry leaves let me know “he” was headed my way. The buck appeared over the top of the ridge, but because the thermals were now warming and the air current rising, the conditions had switched to being in his favor.
The big 5x5 walked in my direction until he came upon one of those scrapes about 18 yards away. With the thermal sucking my scent toward him, I thought I had better take the first opportunity that arose. I held at full draw until it
felt like my arms were going to fall off, when he finally turned his hind-end around to get a better vantage to work the licking branch – now was my chance. I released and was able to watch the buck topple over after a 100-yard dash.
Out of all the avenues this buck could have taken in the middle of 2,000 acres of timber, why did he pick the route of my vantage? More importantly, why did “I” choose that spot? Many hunters have questions about treestand placement. Every situation is different and there aren’t any rules where there aren’t exceptions to them. However, over the years I’ve learned some general practices that will help in most situations when placing a treestand.
Much of choosing the proper stand site has to do with “structure.” As with most animals, whitetails travel from place to place using cover and terrain to their advantage. Learning to recognize the transition areas, access points and travel corridors of whitetails is a key to stand placement.
One of the first things you should do when approaching a new spot is to obtain a satellite image, aerial photo or topographical map. Smartphones make this easy. The first spots to focus on are the funnels. No matter where you hunt –big timber, agricultural land or suburban lots – there are funnels in your hunting area. With a funnel, their movement is confined, and wherever you can restrict their movement to a smaller zone there will be more traffic and it’s easier to position yourself to remain undetected from their supernatural snout.
I like to use either the satellite image or aerial photo in conjunction with a topographical map. It’s often difficult to see terrain breaks on a photo taken from above, but the topographical map will point out elevations. Funnels aren’t always created by obvious physical obstructions. Oftentimes they’re created by subtle terrain changes that guide, or force, movement one way or another and most often these terrain changes can’t be seen on a picture taken from above so the topo map can be valuable.
When looking over an area I like to imagine the terrain without any trees or debris first. Look for the points, terrain breaks, steeper angles, edges or turns that will force or encourage the animal to go one way over another. If you try and foretell their travel patterns this way first, when you add the trees, brush and blowdowns back to the picture it can sometimes seem obvious where they will pass. Why not influence whitetails to travel where you want? It’s possible to create your own trails by using a pruner through brush or a weed-whacker through tall grass and weeds. Mature bucks can often be found around the thickest, nastiest cover you can find. However, when traveling through the thick cover they will usually, unless forced, travel the easiest route they can find - the path of least resistance. You can also fell trees to force them to go a certain direction. Create your own “human-made” funnels.
Here, the author poses with a buck that was influenced into shooting range by a deep drop-off on a ridge and several blow-downs. When you can restrict a buck’s movement to a smaller zone, it becomes much easier to play the wind. (Photo Credit: Todd Amenrud)
December 2021 35
We know that a whitetail’s number-one defense is its extremely responsive sense of smell. To experience consistent success, we need to learn how to battle this defense and maybe even use it to our advantage. Aside from reducing odors on our person and cutting down on the foreign odors we leave behind, we also need to understand how whitetails use the air currents to their advantage.
Scent elimination is extremely important. We need to reduce foreign odors to a minimum. Everything that I bring into the whitetail’s domain will be treated with the Scent Killer system to destroy smells at the molecular level. I really like Scent Killer Gold Spray because of its “Hunt Dry” technology. This can be sprayed on your hunting clothes and will work for days after drying.
Besides reducing offensive odors, we also have to learn how to play the wind and thermal current. They are the “hallway” and “elevator” that carry smells to a deer’s nose. You have to know how to place yourself within their terrain so you can “see them” before they “smell you.” Learning air current patterns is also a secret to predicting whitetail movement.
Everybody knows what the wind is, but most whitetail hunters don’t pay enough attention to thermal current. The heating and cooling of the air combined with different temperatures emanating from various sourc-
es makes the air current do some strange things. In the West, because of the mountainous topography most veteran hunters are familiar with thermal, but it’s also important in flat areas, too. It could be as simple as when hunting a clearing, paying attention to where the sun will rise. When the sun comes up it shines on one side of the clearing first. The sun warms the air and the current rises on that side of the clearing before it does anywhere else.
Pay particular attention around water, rocks, dark conifer trees or anything that may retain a different temperature than the air. The sun warms these things, and they hold on to the heat and will influence airflow. When the temperatures differ, you’d be amazed at how the air current may be swirling around.
Many mediocre hunters lick their finger, stick it in the air, and point downwind to the spot where they’ll place their stand. Here’s where they fail - often the sign they are observing has been made under totally different conditions than the wind blowing that one specific direction. A whitetail will not spend a great deal of time in an area where it can’t use its nose efficiently. A buck may never use that trail or enter that area under
As the author experienced in the beginning story, conditions are constantly changing in the wild.
Use a quality system of scent elimination to protect yourself in case the circumstances aren’t what you planned on. (Photo Credit: Todd Amenrud)
36 Cooperative Farming News Besides reducing offensive odors, we also have to learn how to play the wind and thermal current. They are the “hallway” and “elevator” that carry smells to a deer’s nose.
those specific conditions.
You can’t just set up downwind of an area and think, “Well, he won’t smell me here,” and expect to have luck. My first thought about a spot is “under what conditions will a whitetail want to be in this area.” I want a buck to feel comfortable with the chosen site, but also under the conditions that I want to hunt the site. You need to set up for how a whitetail plays the wind.
My best advice is to purchase some sort of wind-detection device or unscented cotton. With a “dust-puffer” you can actually see how the air current is blowing. Aside from this being a great tool to physically play the wind, when you actually see the air current it really helps to teach you some of the secrets of deer movement. Cattail duff or milkweed seeds also work great for this. Milkweed seed is my favorite – the light fluffy “puff balls” will easily float on the breeze and can be seen from further away than the other options.
Once you find a good spot, it’s probably a good idea to set up multiple stand locations so that you can play different wind directions and conditions, yet hunt the same deer. At a given time, I may have as many as a dozen different stand locations to pursue one specific buck. This way you won’t burn a stand and ruin your chances at a mature buck by pushing your luck and hunting a site when the conditions aren’t in your favor, which is NEVER a good idea.
More bucks are harvested each year while hunting from treestands than by any other method. If you examine the site’s topography and structure, and then take the wind and thermal into consideration, success will come for you.
With a wind detection tool you can puff fine particles into the air and actually see how the air current is flowing and how smells are being carried to a deer. (Photo Credit: Todd Amenrud)
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Asian Venison Tacos
INGREDIENTS
8 Tablespoons soy sauce, divided 6 teaspoons toasted sesame oil, divided 1-1/2 teaspoons salt 1/4 teaspoon pepper 4 Tablespoons honey, divided 2 Tablespoons lime juice 2 Tablespoons hoisin sauce 1 Tablespoon red pepper paste 1 teaspoon rice wine vinegar 2 cloves garlic smashed 1-1/2 pounds venison hindquarter sliced in half horizontally 12 mini flour tortillas 4 cups shredded iceberg lettuce 1/4 cup shredded Napa cabbage 1/4 cup shredded red cabbage 10 scallions sliced on the bias
INSTRUCTIONS
1. For marinade, combine 5 tablespoons soy sauce, 2 teaspoons of sesame oil, salt, and pepper in a medium bowl. Coat the venison with the marinade. Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour. 2. Meanwhile, prepare the Cabbage Dressing and the Korean Taco Sauce. For the Cabbage Dressing, combine 1 tablespoon soy sauce, 1 ta-
blespoon honey, 2 teaspoons sesame oil, and lime juice in a large bowl. Mix well and set aside. 3. For the Korean Taco Sauce, combine 2 tablespoons soy sauce, the 3 remaining tablespoons honey, 2 teaspoons sesame oil, hoisin sauce, red pepper paste, rice wine vinegar, and garlic in a medium bowl. 4. Remove venison from refrigerator. Heat cast-iron skillet until smoking hot, and then add both pieces of venison. Brown for 3 minutes. Turn over for another 2 to 3 minutes until medium rare. Transfer venison to a cutting board and let rest. 5. Meanwhile, place 3 tortillas in a large, dry, non-stick skillet over medium-high heat until pliable, about 20 seconds per side. Repeat with remaining tortillas. 6. Add lettuce, cabbage, and scallions to bowl with Cabbage Dressing. Toss to combine. Add salt and pepper to taste. 7. Cut venison into strips across the bias. 8. Fill tortillas with cabbage mixture, venison, and drizzle with Korean Taco Sauce.
About Stacy Lyn Harris
Stacy Lyn Harris is a best-selling cookbook author, blogger, TV personality, public speaker, wife and mother of seven children. She currently lives in Pike Road, Alabama, with her husband Scott and their children. Stacy Lyn regularly appears on cable and broadcast television as a guest chef and sustainable living expert. Her critically-acclaimed “Harvest Cookbook” was published in 2017 and contains many of her family’s favorite recipes, along with stories from her life growing up in the Black Belt and tips she’s learned along the way.
Alabama Farmers Cooperative, Inc.
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samantha.hendricks@alafarm.com
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