NCPI Workmark
Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

Search Results


81 results for "Dean, Jim"
Currently viewing results 46 - 60
Previous
PAGE OF 6
Next
Record #:
9801
Author(s):
Abstract:
Using photographs from the beginning of the 20th-century, Dean describes farms harvests from that period.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
9804
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dean discusses the craft of two waterfowl hunters who make their own decoys. Neal Conoley, Jr. has been carving since 1967 and Stuart Critcher since 1945.
Source:
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
9818
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dean discusses fishing in the lakes located in the state's Piedmont section. He discusses each species; what is the best lake and its location to catch them in; what time of year to fish for them; tactics; and lures or bait.
Full Text:
Record #:
9842
Author(s):
Abstract:
The North Carolina General Assembly passed legislation in 1987 requiring mandatory wearing of blaze orange when hunting certain types of big-game in the state. Warning tickets will be given during the 1987 hunting season with full implementation in 1988.
Full Text:
Record #:
9849
Author(s):
Abstract:
Horace Kephart came to North Carolina in 1904, after a career in St. Louis as a librarian. He lived in the Hazel Creek area of Swain County and later moved to Bryson City, the county seat. He wrote many books and articles about the outdoors. CAMPING AND WOODCRAFT, published in 1906, is considered a classic in its field and is still in print over eighty years later. Dean discusses some of Kephart�s woodcraft wisdom.
Source:
Full Text:
Record #:
9869
Author(s):
Abstract:
The two major goals of the Conservation Reserve Program are to successfully remove land from cultivation and to reduce soil erosion. It has been widely publicized as a boon to small wildlife, and the program will pay farmers money to improve wildlife on their property. Dean discusses the advantages and disadvantages of the program.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
12237
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dean discusses things to consider when planning to build a new fishing pond or when seeking to improve the fishing in an older one.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
15306
Author(s):
Abstract:
The North Carolina Wildlife Commission began its Delayed Harvest Program twenty years ago. The program currently covers twenty-one streams and one lake. Regulations require that all fishermen release the trout they catch between October first and the first Saturday in June. They must fish with a single hook artificial lure or fly. Beginning in June, fishermen are allowed to keep seven trout a day. Dean discusses other requirements of the program which is one of the Wildlife Commission's most popular.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
19264
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dean discusses the ways to improve the numbers of wildlife that inhabit older ponds. This often involves draining the pond to see what is going on beneath the surface, and starting the process from scratch.
Subject(s):
Full Text:
Record #:
19273
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dean discusses what steps to take when improving the fishing in a new or renovated pond, and the people to turn to when you need advice.
Subject(s):
Record #:
19664
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dean gives a brief history of bass lures, rods and reels, with an emphasis on the golden age of bass fishing from 1900-1940.
Full Text:
Record #:
20038
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dean continues his brief history of bass lures, rods and reels, with an emphasis on the golden age of bass fishing from 1900-1940.
Full Text:
Record #:
24847
Author(s):
Abstract:
Jim Dean recounts the story of the first house he bought while on his second job out of college. It was infested with mice as he found out after buying the house. Not wanting to make holes in the walls, he procured his Daisy Red Ryder carbine and began a mouse hunt through his house.
Full Text:
Record #:
25938
Author(s):
Abstract:
Lake Mattamuskeet has been known as one of the best places for Canadian geese hunting in the world, but the lake has gone to bust over the past decade. Dean details the findings presented in a July issue of Wildlife in North Carolina written by NCWRC waterfowl biologist Jack Donnelley, US Bureau of Sport Fishreis and Wildlife biologist Otto Florschutz, and Mattamuskeet Refuge Manager John Davis. Research found that dwindling geese populations could be attributed to changes in corn and soybean production in North Carolina, as well as excessive hunting pressure in the area.
Source:
Friend O’ Wildlife (NoCar Oversize SK 431 F74x), Vol. 16 Issue 3, Summer 1973, p15-16
Record #:
25948
Author(s):
Abstract:
Preliminary findings have discovered that organic water pollution is creating the conditions for disease among game fish in North Carolina’s fishing lakes. The disease, which has been found to be present in all southeastern states, produces sores lesions on the fish skin, scales, and mouths. Pollution from sewage, industrial waste, and runoff produce the conditions which favor the condition to be spread among populations; however, at the time there is no particular solution except to limit pollution into the river and lake systems.
Source:
Friend O’ Wildlife (NoCar Oversize SK 431 F74x), Vol. 17 Issue 1, 1974, p6