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Re: Arctic Hare [Re: mad_mike] #8100688
03/16/24 04:59 AM
03/16/24 04:59 AM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 63,142
Minnesota
330-Trapper Offline

trapper
330-Trapper  Offline

trapper

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 63,142
Minnesota
Originally Posted by mad_mike
Originally Posted by yukonjeff
Yes, they are, hunted with snowmachines like cowboys.

You hunt cowboys with snow machines up there?

Hahahaha grin


NRA and NTA Life Member
www.BackroadsRevised@etsy.com




Re: Arctic Hare [Re: yukonjeff] #8100758
03/16/24 08:06 AM
03/16/24 08:06 AM
Joined: Oct 2015
Posts: 613
Southaest Kansas
C
Coyote Clayton Offline
trapper
Coyote Clayton  Offline
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C

Joined: Oct 2015
Posts: 613
Southaest Kansas
Originally Posted by yukonjeff
Originally Posted by slowpoke
Are they different than our snowshoe hares ?
They do look long legged …..


Yes, a different species.

They are typically hunted in March and April when they are gathered up mating on the tundra. If the female is shot first, the rest won't leave, and they get the bunch at once.



Jack rabbits do the same here. Won't leave the female. The picture looks like an all white jack rabbit.


Praise the Lord and Pass the ammunition.
Re: Arctic Hare [Re: yukonjeff] #8101407
03/16/24 11:33 PM
03/16/24 11:33 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,296
Mt.
g smith Offline
trapper
g smith  Offline
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,296
Mt.
Jeff ,many thanks . I
look forward to your post


You can ride a fast horse slow but you can't ride a slow horse fast .
Re: Arctic Hare [Re: yukonjeff] #8101490
03/17/24 06:57 AM
03/17/24 06:57 AM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 20,087
SEPA
L
Lugnut Offline
trapper
Lugnut  Offline
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 20,087
SEPA
Ten pounds and twenty-six inches long? That's going to make a BIG pile of hasenpfeffer!

Are they as tasty as cottontails?


Eh...wot?

Re: Arctic Hare [Re: Lugnut] #8101723
03/17/24 12:42 PM
03/17/24 12:42 PM
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 4,797
M.T.V. Alaska
Y
yukonjeff Offline OP
trapper
yukonjeff  Offline OP
trapper
Y

Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 4,797
M.T.V. Alaska
Originally Posted by g smith
Jeff ,many thanks . I
look forward to your post


Thanks brother, I enjoy your post too.

Originally Posted by Lugnut
Ten pounds and twenty-six inches long? That's going to make a BIG pile of hasenpfeffer!

Are they as tasty as cottontails?

I have not had cottontails in a long time, but the favor is mild, sort of a beef flavor. They call them low bush moose in Alaska.

Re: Arctic Hare [Re: yukonjeff] #8101893
03/17/24 04:51 PM
03/17/24 04:51 PM
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 1,859
Northwest Territories
M
muskrat411 Offline
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muskrat411  Offline
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Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 1,859
Northwest Territories
The Arctic hare in Canada are all on the arctic islands. I did not know they occured on the mainland in Alaska. I went to Victoria Island last year. I was really hoping to get a rabbit or two but the weather was really terrible. Did not see anything.

Re: Arctic Hare [Re: Gulo] #8103288
03/19/24 09:20 AM
03/19/24 09:20 AM
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 342
Siberia 🐁
T
Tatiana Offline
"Mushroom Guru"
Tatiana  Offline
"Mushroom Guru"
T

Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 342
Siberia 🐁
Originally Posted by Gulo
Hey yukonjeff. Enjoy your posts. Thanks. Far as I know (which may be erroneous), Arctic hares, Lepus arcticus, only occur in Canada. Alaska has only Alaskan Hares, Lepus othus. However, in the minds of some "experts", they are one-in-the-same. Other biologists keep them separated. I'm with you, I lump them all together and we called 'em arctic hares. Whatever their handle, impressively big bunnies and tasty, too.

Jack


If I remember right mtDNA showed that the Alaskan Hare is a basal branch in this group, and the Arctic Hare are nested within our modern Mountain Hare (Lepus timidus), so there has been quite a bit of commotion caused by moving glaciers and other factors. They are all very similar, big, leggy and very edible. Ours are usually within 8-10 lbs, but they get much bigger in the most northern populations or when they get fat. I use them for stew and for pies. Dried feet are a traditional good luck charm given to kids.

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Re: Arctic Hare [Re: yukonjeff] #8103318
03/19/24 10:08 AM
03/19/24 10:08 AM
Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 18,626
Green County Wisconsin
G
GREENCOUNTYPETE Online content
trapper
GREENCOUNTYPETE  Online Content
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Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 18,626
Green County Wisconsin
thanks Jeff and Tatiana for the great posts

the looks like a very nice hare pie

always very interesting to learn about these other species


America only has one issue, we have a Responsibility crisis and everything else stems from it.
Re: Arctic Hare [Re: yukonjeff] #8103365
03/19/24 11:19 AM
03/19/24 11:19 AM
Joined: Mar 2020
Posts: 7,371
W NY
Turtledale Offline
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Turtledale  Offline
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Posts: 7,371
W NY
YJ, great post. We eat cottontail rabbit where I live.
Tatiana, the pie is a work of art. People say you eat with your eyes and now I'm hungry


NYSTA, NTA, FTA, life member Erie county trappers assn.,life member Catt.county trappers
Re: Arctic Hare [Re: yukonjeff] #8103470
03/19/24 02:21 PM
03/19/24 02:21 PM
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 10,836
Asheville, NC
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charles Offline
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Asheville, NC
They chew willow bark, which is the source for aspirin. Some years they eat too much and die off. Then they rebound in the next few years. Was told this by a Denali guide. He pointed out the willows that were chewed the winter before when the snow was deep.

Re: Arctic Hare [Re: charles] #8103486
03/19/24 02:47 PM
03/19/24 02:47 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,521
Moved to Fbks, Ak.
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martentrapper Offline
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Moved to Fbks, Ak.
Originally Posted by charles
They chew willow bark, which is the source for aspirin. Some years they eat too much and die off. Then they rebound in the next few years. Was told this by a Denali guide. He pointed out the willows that were chewed the winter before when the snow was deep.


That's the snowshoe hare, Charles. Arctic hares eat something different, maybe grasses. Their pellets are lighter in color than the snowshoe hare.

Re: Arctic Hare [Re: yukonjeff] #8104026
03/20/24 04:49 AM
03/20/24 04:49 AM
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 4,797
M.T.V. Alaska
Y
yukonjeff Offline OP
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M.T.V. Alaska
I heard that one as well, the willows get chewed bad by rabbits it omits a poison that kills off the rabbits. not sure if its true or not.

The Arctic hares eat willow just like snowshoes do. Also, tundra grasses when they can, They are hunted on the tundra in the short red willow on the coastal flat tundra thats only about knee high, or its buried in snow and only the tops are sticking out. No trees there at all. They like to hang around tundra mounds, small hills and always run up hill if there is a mountain nearby.

I have caught them in lynx traps twice using Arctic Hare fur as bait. Must wanted to mate. I have caught them in fox traps and snares, like Tataina did above.

They walk on their tip toes so their tracks look like fox tracks hard to tell them apart sometimes.
I have a bunch living on the hill behind the house, mostly come out at night.

Great responses guys, Thanks.

Re: Arctic Hare [Re: yukonjeff] #8104285
03/20/24 12:58 PM
03/20/24 12:58 PM
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 1,859
Northwest Territories
M
muskrat411 Offline
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Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 1,859
Northwest Territories
Originally Posted by yukonjeff
I heard that one as well, the willows get chewed bad by rabbits it omits a poison that kills off the rabbits. not sure if its true or not.

The Arctic hares eat willow just like snowshoes do. Also, tundra grasses when they can, They are hunted on the tundra in the short red willow on the coastal flat tundra thats only about knee high, or its buried in snow and only the tops are sticking out. No trees there at all. They like to hang around tundra mounds, small hills and always run up hill if there is a mountain nearby.

I have caught them in lynx traps twice using Arctic Hare fur as bait. Must wanted to mate. I have caught them in fox traps and snares, like Tataina did above.

They walk on their tip toes so their tracks look like fox tracks hard to tell them apart sometimes.
I have a bunch living on the hill behind the house, mostly come out at night.

Great responses guys, Thanks.

Snowshoe hare anyways are cabalistic. When stressed anyways, during our frequent floods in the delta I have seen a couple times where a group of rabits are trapped on a small bit of high ground and there is a dead rabbit that they are eating. So I figure the Arctic Hare you caught are going after the bait to eat it.

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