2020 Colorado Rodent Grand Slam

trb

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With the recent harvest of 3 beavers on an extremely cold river trip, I am proud to announce my completion of the Colorado Rodent Grand Slam, an achievement of entirely my own deluded imagination. As most of my big game pursuits were cancelled by wildfires, and relegated to eagerly helping friends and my brother fill their tags, I focused my efforts on the small game front.

Here is the species by species breakdown:

Abert's Squirrel
I have a spot about a half an hour from my house that consistently has Abert's every year. I am consciously not taking more than one or two annually from this area in the hopes their population/range will increase. My wife and I enjoyed buffalo squirrel wings that night.

Fox Squirrel
Harvested below my bird feeder in my backyard from my upstairs window with my bow while my students were in virtual Art (I am a 5th grade teacher currently teaching online). If possible, I will include a bonus video below that my wife took. Forgetting to replace my target tips with my small game tip was nearly a costly mistake as the squirrel ran almost 50 yards into my neighbors back yard with an arrow in it. My wife and I, again, enjoyed buffalo squirrel wings.

Marmot(s)
As one of Colorado's earliest opening small game seasons, I brought my grandfather's .22 along on a friend's goat scouting trip. Lots of goats, lots of marmots. I made Korean BBQ pulled marmot sandwiches on my wife's homemade sourdough. Marmot tastes a lot like squirrel, but the quarters are significantly bigger.

Beaver
Taking advantage of CPW's unadvertised night hunting permits, friends and I night floated our state's namesake river and harvested 4 beavers between us over 13 river miles. The next day was spent skinning, butchering, and killing a few ducks and geese before floating out. My wife and I had Instapot beaver stew last night, and have several more meals in our future with the majority of the harvest in my freezer. I still need to flesh and tan hides, but I am hoping to try and make a couple pairs of beaver glassing mitts over the winter.




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Solid stuff, marmot never crossed my mind, but that sounds like a winner.
 
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Solid stuff, marmot never crossed my mind, but that sounds like a winner.
Neither had I...but after emailing a CPW biologist about the risk of plague, and that leading to her connecting me with the CPW disease specialist and apparently the country's leading marmot biologist who works in Crested Butte, it became a reality. To summarize their advice, try and take them at higher altitude to avoid fleas, thus avoiding the risk of plague. The ones I killed had no sign of fleas (as opposed to beavers, who are absolutely covered in them). The academic biologist out of Crested Butte asked that I try and avoid harvesting nursing females. When I asked how to best identify females, he responded with perhaps the best email I have ever gotten:

"If you see nipples, she’s got a litter. But you only see them when close to weaning. Males have ‘more robust’ faces than females…but I spend too much time looking at marmots."

The weekend was chock full of glassing for marmot nips. In my humble opinion, no other small game hunt can compare to the alpine setting, lax season and take restrictions, and salacious nipple glassing opportunities.
 
hahaha. If you were on any other website and said you were glassing nipples you might be in a little trouble. I see so many marmots and have always wondered... guess I'll be doing some marmot hunting. Thanks for doing the research and sharing
 
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You forgot porcupine, which Colorado has some fantastic Porcupine. Congrats on the awesome hunt I have been meaning to go on a Marmot hunt for a while.
 
You forgot porcupine, which Colorado has some fantastic Porcupine. Congrats on the awesome hunt I have been meaning to go on a Marmot hunt for a while.

Well shit, thanks for the 2021 goal!

Strangely, I have never seen one here. I saw one a few years ago on the San Juan river in the desert just into New Mexico.
 
Very cool post and pics. Learned a few things and am surprised Beaver are covered in fleas given how much time they spend in water?

Curious to learn how the meats tasted. Especially Marmot and Beaver.

Thanks for sharing.
 
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Very cool post and pics. Learned a few things and am surprised Beaver are covered in fleas given how much time they spend in water?

Curious to learn how the meats tasted. Especially Marmot and Beaver.

Thanks for sharing.

I have wondered the same thing, and after some searching it appears that is a common misconception and they may in fact be beaver beetles. They definitely burrow way in there, and their fur is so dense it's probably not hard to find air pockets.


Beaver is a red meat very similar to beef. The fat is perfectly good tasting, and I trimmed it all off the quarter, cubed it, sauteed it, and it was pressure cooked with vegetables and venison bone broth for an hour or so. It could not have been more tender. Probably up there with elk, pronghorn and teal as my favorite game meats.

Marmot is basically just like a big squirrel. You probably want to trim the fat off, and much like other game meats, if you cook at too high of a temp, it can be tough. I crockpotted it and shredded it like BBQ pulled pork. It's not quite as good as fox or Abert's squirrel, but it's hard to ignore the liberal regs surrounding their take, and how much bigger and more common they are in CO than non-pine squirrels.
 
No pine squirrel??


With the recent harvest of 3 beavers on an extremely cold river trip, I am proud to announce my completion of the Colorado Rodent Grand Slam, an achievement of entirely my own deluded imagination. As most of my big game pursuits were cancelled by wildfires, and relegated to eagerly helping friends and my brother fill their tags, I focused my efforts on the small game front.

Here is the species by species breakdown:

Abert's Squirrel
I have a spot about a half an hour from my house that consistently has Abert's every year. I am consciously not taking more than one or two annually from this area in the hopes their population/range will increase. My wife and I enjoyed buffalo squirrel wings that night.

Fox Squirrel
Harvested below my bird feeder in my backyard from my upstairs window with my bow while my students were in virtual Art (I am a 5th grade teacher currently teaching online). If possible, I will include a bonus video below that my wife took. Forgetting to replace my target tips with my small game tip was nearly a costly mistake as the squirrel ran almost 50 yards into my neighbors back yard with an arrow in it. My wife and I, again, enjoyed buffalo squirrel wings.

Marmot(s)
As one of Colorado's earliest opening small game seasons, I brought my grandfather's .22 along on a friend's goat scouting trip. Lots of goats, lots of marmots. I made Korean BBQ pulled marmot sandwiches on my wife's homemade sourdough. Marmot tastes a lot like squirrel, but the quarters are significantly bigger.

Beaver
Taking advantage of CPW's unadvertised night hunting permits, friends and I night floated our state's namesake river and harvested 4 beavers between us over 13 river miles. The next day was spent skinning, butchering, and killing a few ducks and geese before floating out. My wife and I had Instapot beaver stew last night, and have several more meals in our future with the majority of the harvest in my freezer. I still need to flesh and tan hides, but I am hoping to try and make a couple pairs of beaver glassing mitts over the winter.




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marmot is a very worthwhile endeavor. tasty and it can be little like goat hunting, except you don't need a tag.

love this post.

i have yet to find good public land squirrel hunting
 
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