By Bob Frye Pittsburgh Tribune Review
If you’re an outdoorsman and you can’t find something  to do this month, you’re just not trying.
October — not even counting the archery season,  already under way — presents all kinds of opportunities to hunt for everything  from Pennsylvania’s biggest game to small game. And this week starts the busiest  of busy times.
 Squirrel season starts Saturday and runs through Nov.  24. These are boom days for squirrels, with populations as high as they’ve been  in decades, said Tom Hardisky, a biologist with the Pennsylvania Game  Commission.
“There are squirrels just about everywhere you look.  There’s no shortage of them,” Hardisky said.
Last year, an estimated 690,141 squirrels were  harvested by hunters. To find them, Hardisky recommends looking for  mast-producing trees such as walnut, butternut, oak and hickory.
Junior hunters can chase squirrels — as well as  pheasants — through Friday, and rabbits through Saturday, in special youth only  seasons, too.
 Ruffed grouse
 Grouse hunting still has its followers, but this  season — which opens Saturday and runs through Nov. 24 — might be a rough one  for them.
Sightings of adult grouse and broods were off this  spring, indicating that populations will be slightly below average this fall,  commission biologist Lisa Williams said.
The hunting in the northwest and northcentral regions  likely will remain “good to excellent,” though. 
Warren, Forest, McKean, Potter, Elk and Cameron  typically produce the most flushes and birds. Things will be only “fair” in the  southwest.
Statewide, hunters averaged about 1.32 flushes per  hour on their way to taking 52,000 grouse last year.
 Antlerless deer
 Pennsylvania’s early muzzleloader season for  antlerless deer and its early rifle doe season for junior and senior hunters  start this coming weekend. 
The muzzleloader season runs from Oct. 13-20, and the  junior/senior season is Oct. 18-20.
The hunts, less than a decade old, draw a decent  crowd. As you’d expect, though, those carrying more modern firearms take more  deer.
The muzzleloader season attracted 65,000 hunters who  took about 6,000 deer last year, said the Game Commission’s Jerry Feaser. The  rifle season drew about 32,000 hunters who took about 9,000 deer.
Hunters can take one antlerless deer, provided they  have a valid doe tag or DMAP coupon. 
 Black bears
 This year, for the first time ever, hunters can kill  a bear during the muzzleloader and three-day rifle deer seasons, though only in  wildlife management units 2B, 5B, 5C and 5D. A few bears have already fallen to  archers. 
Carl Roe, executive director of the commission, told  board members in Franklin that a 12-year-old girl hunting with a crossbow in  Lehigh County shot a 165-pound bear. She is the first person to take a bear in  the extended season. 
Not far behind was 17-year-old Aaron Hwosdow of West  Deer, who shot a 350-pounder in Allegheny County while bowhunting for deer. 
 Waterfowl 
 Duck hunting in the so-called “south zone” — which  takes in all of Pennsylvania south of I-80 — runs Oct. 13-20. The early season  is prime time for taking species like wood ducks, according to commission data. 
 The bag limit is again a liberal one. Hunters can  take six birds a day, counting all species.

 
 
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