20 November 2010

Hunting Log: HooJiro Inoshishi

Today was the first group hunt of the year with the "52" Big Game Hunting Association. The morning was supposed to be spent analyzing the fresh tracks and preparing to hunt. Instead we spent the morning clearing away trees and branches and repairing huge, impassable ruts in the access roads. Our area experienced several serious rainstorms this fall and many of our best areas were completely washed out. With the hard work done, and a good lunch break we set up in five positions surrounding a 2.5km by 1.5km block of mixed hardwoods with some traditionally productive briar patches. While walking to my designated location, I jumped 2 does which bolted out of our hunting block. Not a good start, I thought. I set up on their trail rather than my normal spot 100 meters further down the river bed. This would turn out to be a great decision.
Our best tracker, and one of our senior members entered the block on the southern end and I figured it would be at least an hour before they were close enough to jump any game near me. 10 minutes into the hunt, I experienced the most heart stopping 10 seconds of hunting in many years. I heard a large animal bounding through the briars and dry leaves. I drew my weapon and about 4 seconds after the first sound, a huge boar appeared. I found him in the scope, released the safety, and began squeezing the trigger. My gun boomed as he bounded off the side of the river bed and my bullet struck home in mid air. He hit the ground with a tremendous thud! I immediately chambered another round in case he began to run. He made an attempt to raise up and I fired a finishing shot to his head. I quickly reloaded with 1 more round and focused on this hulking monster on the ground. I tried to see of he was still breathing, but was unable to because my pounding heart was making the scope bounce! I waited about a minute and approached cautiously. When I got close, It was clear that my second shot was true and he had expired instantly! I called the kill into our leader and we began the process of hauling him out of the woods. This involved cutting a 150 meter long trail for a mini 4x4 with a crane, and pulling out about 100 feet of winch cable to get him out of the river bed. We hauled him to the ice cold mountain river, finished field dressing him, washed out the body, and cleaned all the innards for Motsu-Nabe (soup) later this week (liver, heart, kidneys, stomach, chitterlings, and spleen).
This boar was estimated by our association as weighing 25 Kann (about 94kg, or 207Lbs). As you can see by his white cheeks, he is an older boar and is locally called "HooJiro" or "White Cheeks". They are reputed to be quite aggressive, and to attack when confronted or injured! Thanks to Federal Premium I did not have to find out! BTW, The Japanese name for the Great White Shark is "HooJiro-Zame" or "White Cheeks Shark" and these wild boar have the same temperament!
Now with only 2 days of hunting so far, I have already harvested the "double" that the big game association expects from all our members! I have been quite lucky this year!
We will de-bone this hog Tuesday after work, so please stop by and give us a hand!
See you in the Yama!
SK-1 OUT!

16 November 2010

Shitake!

Our Shitake (yes, the mushroom!) logs have finally started to bloom! Here is our first harvest of Shitake, fresh from the garden (well, actually out behind the butcher shack)! Oishii-so!


OPENING DAY 2010

SK-1 harvested this 5 1/2 year old buck in the first hour of daylight on opening day! This is a Japanese Shika (AKA Sika), known in the local dialect as Ma-Jika, or original deer. He has a fully matured set of antlers with brow tines and three additional tines, the max for a typical deer of this breed.
Nick helped out with the butchering so we made short order of this work, and the freezer is now stocked!

Gut Deer?

See you in the yama!
SK-1 OUT!



Japan's other wildlife

Here are some strange wildlife shots I took while touring Japan this past summer.
Deer statue in Kyoto
Raccoons (fake) at Subashiri-guchi
Rutting deer at Hiroshima
Suzume-bachi (huge bee) killing a dragonfly in Kawagoe-shi
Sakamoto Ryoma statue in Kyoto

Mount Fuji Summit

We finally did the night climb of Mount Fuji (Subashiri Trail) and watched the sunrise! Magnificent! Here are some pics of Nick and me at the top.

Artichokes


Fresh Artichokes!
First off, THANK YOU to Reza for the fresh artichokes from the garden, and to Tom and his family over at KitchenGardenJapan.blogspot, a blog I follow, for the inspiration and recipe that I started with.
I used; olive oil, lemon slices, shiso leaves, fresh basil, fresh mint, fresh apple-mint, cheap white wine, fleur de sel, minced garlic, and fresh Italian parsley to stuffed the artichokes and cooked them in the pressure cooker. I think they came out very tasty and our daughter clearly showed her Paisano side and tore through a plateful herself!

Yabanjin BBQ

Our annual "52 Big Game Hunting Association" BBQ was held at "Yabanjin no su" -our house!



















Of course we had a great menu of wild boar roasted on a spit, motsu-nabe AKA chitterlings soup, hon-jiru AKA boar bone soup, deer steaks, boar chops, and more!

11 September 2010

Computing Again!

We are finally back computing again! Got a new PC and then screwed up the upgrade, struggled for 2 months then begged U-1-3 to un-screw it up. He fixed it in a few minutes!
We now have full Internet access again and are rebuilding our favorites and files. Hope to be back posting in the next few weeks, so please check back!
See you in the woods!
SK-1 OUT!

20 April 2010

Earth Day 2010

What are you doing for Earth Day 2010?

On Earth Day 2008 we did a clean-up and renovation of the Jiggs' Fitness Trail at work. Here are some pics:

Last year, for Earth Day 2009, we cleaned up Numazu Beach. Unfortunately we also found a dead body on the beach, so no pics!
Please, get out and do something for Earth Day 2010. Even if it is working in your garden, cleaning up the parking area at the boat launch, or volunteering with a big group, the most important thing is to do something!
See you in the woods!
SK-1 OUT!




Yamadori Mount

Finally got around to mounting the tail feathers from the nice Yamadori (Copper Pheasant) I took a few years back. They are now on our living room wall. The feathers stand 64cm (25 inches) above the plaque base!

Spring Planting...It Has Begun!

Finally, the snow is gone! Our last snow was Friday but the heavy rain overnight melted it and it was time to get up early Saturday and get planting! I ran the ko-unki (roto-tiller) through the main garden spot and hoed a few rows. With a little bit of guidance from my J-Mom, the Jagaimo, Mayqueen, and Cherie varieties are in the ground, 40 meters worth!



Asparagus! It will take 2 years to yield so it was time to get them in the ground. Planted them right next to the Asatsuki (transplanted from the yama last year) and the Ginger (should yield in 2-3 months).








Chibi-Chan picking tanpopo (dandelion), Note the winter gear: Yes, it is still in the single digits here!







50 meters of mixed wild flowers, Cosmos, Lavender, Sunflowers, and more! Hope this makes a nice view from the kitchen, attracts lots of bees for pollination throughout the farm, and nice flowers for cutting. Who knows, we may have enough to dry as well.

05 April 2010

Inoshishi (Wild Boar) Sausage

Yabanjin made a batch of Wild Boar (Inoshishi) sausage from the boar he took on the day before the end of hunting season. We opted to try three flavors: mild Italian, spicy Italian, and American Southern-Style Breakfast Maple flavor.

SK-1 hard at work in the Kaitai Shack:
Sanitation, sanitation, sanitation! SK-1 is pretty strict!
We made this extra lean, with only 10% fat content. Here it comes, straight from the grinder:A second grind after the spice was added: Wrapped in 250 gram packs for easy cooking. Remember this is considered as "Fresh Sausage" and contains only spices, absolutely no salt, nitrate, 'cure' or other chemicals or preservatives.

We made a total of 15 kg (about 33Lbs) and shared them with some of our closest friends and asked for their critiques...all good so far with some great tips for the next batch!

Candles!

Scented candles really add to our country home. We particularly enjoy an apple-cinnamon scent when we have our wood stove burning. Store-bought candles can be quite expensive and often are not the scent we want...so...we gave candle making a try!

Start with block wax: Need a few scents to experiment with:
And some jars/wicks/dyes:Some gentle heat:Freshly poured:Finished!This was our first micro-batch (bamboo & lemongrass scent) but we are hooked! Give it a try, it's easy!

Got Dirt?


We at the Yabanjin homestead have been experimenting with making our own soap. Today's concoction was foaming liquid hand soap that we promptly named "Dirty Hands"! This contains a mild pumice abrasive, a natural dried kelp (kombu) exfoliant, and is scented to smell just like freshly tilled garden soil. It cleans awesome, and the smell lingers just enough after you wash your hands so that you know you put in a hard day's work!

We also created an all-purpose shower gel for the Yabanjin guys with a refreshing but not perfumey smell (no girly-men here!). Mrs Yabanjin also created a silky foaming hand wash for the ladies of the house with a mild Asian plum scent.

It was fun working on a project with the wife, plus it might just save us some hard earned Yen in the process, and could be part of the post-retirement plan...we'll see!