Sunday, July 5, 2026

The 4-Minute Read: Today we’re tracking down the final premium tag deadlines, dropping a killer clear-the-freezer dove recipe, and checking out a budget optics play for the A-zone ridges. Make sure you ride this one all the way to the bottom—we’re running our first-ever community confession poll at the end, and we want to know exactly how much wild game you’re currently hoarding before the new season fills the shelves back up.

The Board: Crucial Dates & Deadlines

  • July 15, 5:00 p.m. PDT — Elk, Antelope & Bighorn Tag Payment. LAST CALL. This is the one that bites people every single year. If you drew a premium elk, pronghorn, or bighorn sheep tag, successful applicants were notified in early July and payment is due by 5:00 p.m. PDT on July 15. Miss the window and your once-in-a-lifetime tag rolls to an alternate — no exceptions, no mercy. Log into your CDFW online sales profile today, confirm your status, and pay it now so a bad week at work doesn't cost you the hunt. Drew a premium deer tag (like an X-Zone)? Do not assume you're good—while you paid an application fee upfront, you still must log in and pay the actual tag fee by the July 15 deadline to claim it.

  • Saturday, July 11 — Zone A Archery Opener. Coastal blacktail, thick cover, and one of the earliest opening days on the calendar. Confirm your exact subzone dates and boundaries in the 2026 Big Game Digest before you head out — A-zone splits into units, and you want to be standing on the right line. Reminder: You cannot use a firearm to take a deer during archery season, and standard regulatory restrictions apply to carrying firearms afield unless you hold a valid CCW or are hunting other open species like wild pig.

  • Still on last year's license? The 2026–27 license year began July 1; last year's license and validations expired June 30. Anything you do from here — the archery opener, summer hogs, buying dove validations — requires the new license. While you're in the cart, grab your Upland Game Bird Validation and knock out free HIP registration now so you're not scrambling the night before dove opener.

  • Looking ahead: August 8 — A-zone general (rifle) opener. September 1 — dove opener (first split). More on doves below.

From Field to Table: Clear-the-Freezer Dove Poppers

Dove opener is six weeks out, and if you had a good first split last September you've probably still got a bag or two of dove breasts buried in the back of the freezer. Clear them out now — there's no sense stacking fresh birds on top of last year's. And there's no better way to send off a pile of dove than the recipe that's practically the official dish of opening weekend: bacon-wrapped jalapeño poppers. They're forgiving, they disappear off the plate, and they turn a lean little breast into the best reason to fire up the grill.

You'll need (makes about 24 poppers):

  • 24 dove breast halves (roughly 12 birds), boned out

  • 12 slices thin-cut bacon, each cut in half

  • 4 oz cream cheese, softened

  • 3–4 fresh jalapeños, seeded and sliced into strips (leave some membrane in if you want more heat)

  • Kosher salt, black pepper, garlic powder

  • Optional marinade: Italian dressing, or a quick mix of soy sauce and Worcestershire

  • Optional glaze: a drizzle of hot honey or your favorite BBQ sauce

  • Toothpicks

The method:

  1. If you've got the time, marinate the dove breasts a few hours in Italian dressing or the soy-Worcestershire mix — it seasons and tenderizes lean birds that have been in the freezer a while. Pat them dry before you build.

  2. Season the breasts with salt, pepper, and garlic powder.

  3. Build each popper: lay a dab of cream cheese and a strip of jalapeño against a breast, then wrap the whole thing in a half-slice of bacon and pin it with a toothpick.

  4. Grill over medium, indirect heat, turning every few minutes, until the bacon is crisp and rendered and the breast is just cooked through — roughly 15–20 minutes. Keep a cooler zone open, because bacon grease will flare up.

  5. If you're glazing, brush on the hot honey or BBQ sauce in the last 2–3 minutes so it sets without burning.

  6. Rest a couple of minutes, pull the toothpicks, and serve hot.

Doneness note: Dove is lean and unforgiving — the second you blow past done it turns liver-y and tough, so pull the poppers as soon as the bacon crisps and the breast is cooked through. One more heads-up for the table: dove often carries a stray shot pellet or two, so remind your guests to eat with that in mind.

Gear Check: See the Yardage Before You Draw

Laser Rangefinder (Vortex Diamondback HD 2000)

Bowhunting coastal blacktail means steep ground, tight cover, and shots where guessing "forty-ish" turns a clean hole into a wounded deer. A rangefinder erases the guesswork — and for archery, the feature that matters most isn't max distance, it's angle compensation. Shoot up or down a ridge and the true horizontal distance your arrow needs to fly is shorter than the line-of-sight number; a rangefinder with angle-comp gives you the actual "shoot-to" yardage so you hold dead-on.

The Diamondback HD 2000 is the value play here. It reads far past any ethical shot you'd ever take with a bow or a rifle, the glass is clean enough to range in low light at the edges of the day when blacktail actually move, and it's backed by Vortex's unlimited lifetime VIP warranty — if it ever quits on you, they fix or replace it, no receipt required. It typically streets around $250–300 (check current pricing and specs before you buy). If you're stretching to rifle range in August too, angle-comp plus honest glass covers both seasons in one tool.

Upland News: Dove Opener Is Six Weeks Out — Prep Now

It's the unofficial kickoff to California's hunting calendar, and it sneaks up fast. The first dove split runs September 1 through 15 statewide, with a second split in November. The daily bag is 15 mourning and white-winged doves combined, no more than 10 of which may be white-winged, and possession is triple the daily.

Two things worth handling now, not on August 30:

  • Validations and shells. You'll need a valid hunting license, the Upland Game Bird Validation, and your free HIP number to hunt doves. Nonlead shot is required for taking dove — and any game with a firearm — anywhere in California. The small upland shot sizes vanish from shelves by late August every year, so buy your nonlead boxes early.

  • Start glassing. Evenings on water sources and cut grain fields will show you where birds are trading. The scouting you do in July is the limit you fill in September.

Dog of the Week

Meet "Shadow"Owner: Tad A., Durham, CA

At 8 years old, this seasoned Springer Spaniel is an absolute mallard machine in the rice, proving year after year that heart and drive beat size every single day. He cuts through the heavy winter tule cover with ease and sits dead-quiet in the blind when the birds are working. When he's off the clock, Shadow likes to unwind with a dip in the backyard pool and stay sharp playing with his local crew—Chewy, Cali, and Tilly.

Want your dog featured? Hit reply, send us a clean photo of your hunting partner, and give us a quick 2–3 sentence blurb on what they hunt and where they earn their kibble. Pointers, flushers, retrievers, and the occasional very good mutt all qualify.

Missed a briefing? You can check out our full lineup of previously featured NorCal hunting dogs and read their stories at this link,[dog-of-the-week]

Conditions: Heat & Fire — Read This Before the Opener

NorCal summer is here in full, and this one's running hot. Vegetation across the region has been drying out since mid-May and fire activity is ahead of pace. Red Flag Warnings — strong winds, low humidity, and dry fuels — have been recurring across Northern California, and fire restrictions are already landing on public land ahead of the holiday.

Before you load the truck for a scout or the opener:

  • Check restrictions for your exact unit. National Forest, BLM, and CAL FIRE restrictions can change fast and vary by district. Confirm your specific ground before you go.

  • Beat the heat. Game moves in the first and last hour of light — plan your archery sits around water and shaded bedding, and carry far more water than you think you need on a July ridge.

  • Don't be the ignition. Avoid anything that throws a spark near dry vegetation, and have a plan in case conditions turn.

Community: Help Us Build the Pack

This briefing gets sharper when we hear from you. Drop us a quick reply and tell us:

  1. What zones do you hunt most?

  2. What are you chasing this fall — blacktail, ducks, doves, pigs?

  3. Tell us how we can improve our weekly briefing. 

Be honest: How much venison is currently sitting in your freezer right now?

Login or Subscribe to participate

Got a hunting partner who lives in the foothills, the rice, or along the riverbanks? Forward this briefing and point them to norcalhunt.com. Word of mouth from real hunters is how we grow.

Stay safe out there, get your gear cleaned, and we'll see you in the field.

— The NorCal Hunt Team

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