Jump to content

Deleted Account

Members
  • Posts

    763
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

 Content Type 

Profiles

Forums

Hunting New York - NY Hunting, Deer, Bow Hunting, Fishing, Trapping, Predator News and Forums

Media Demo

Links

Calendar

Store

Posts posted by Deleted Account

  1. 16 hours ago, Belo said:

    i dont know why we care so much about what stupid people do. But that's a liberal society for you, ruin shit for everyone else trying to protect the stupid. Let em huff paint, more jobs for my kids. 

    One man's opinion, I know, but anything that might save a kid from doing something stupid and dangerous is worthwhile. You're never going to keep 100% of them from doing that stuff, but if it saves one kid from burning brain cells, turning to harder drugs, and then getting other kids hooked, then I'm happy to take the literally 2 seconds it takes to recite my birthday. I don't know about you, but that doesn't "ruin" anything for me.

    I don't think there's anything "liberal" about it, just trying to keep minors who lack fully developed brains, from making life-altering decisions.

    Just to add, all parents swear "that will never be my kid" until it is their kid....

  2. True story, my father-in-law, back in Illinois had a terrible cold during harvest one year. He was sick as a dog, had been in the field all day, rolling in the mud to fix equipment. He went to CVS to buy some Sudafed, and they refused to sell it to him. 

    Now granted, Southern Illinois has a huge meth problem (you wouldn't believe the anhydrous theft that goes on), but he refuses to go back to that store to this day. 

    • Like 1
  3. Just now, steve863 said:

     

    I think it would be a bigger problem disposing intestines nearer to a dwelling than leaving them in the woods for the scavengers to take care of.

     

     

     

    We would always take them to the shop, and they'd either end up in a backhoe bucket and get buried, or tied up in a trash bag in the dumpster.

  4. I guess I'll build off this question, how many field dress in the field? I don't think I have ever field dressed in the field, but I've only hunted areas that allow for a short drag to a spot that can be accessed by a truck or ATV. 

    My preference is to dress them hanging (if possible) or on a truck tailgate. Either way, I always get somewhere that I have access to water and a place to dispose of waste. 

  5. I don't cut the pelvis and usually only cut as far up the chest as long as my knife will allow and then reach the rest of the way up to cut the trachea and esophagus. It's usually a bloody mess, so I may have to try a small saw blade to get a little higher. 

    For the other end, I just cut around the "orfices" and pull them through. That's the way I learned to do it, and I've never thought to try anything different. 

    • Like 2
  6. 6 minutes ago, Al Bundy said:

    My Lab is turning six in a few months. Thinking back, she likely picked up/ate a piece of spent 4th of July type sparkler on Saturday night.  I am not certain she ate it or just picked it up. I thought she picked it up and dropped when I told her to.  If this is the cause, I would think she would show signs before 3 days.  That was Saturday night and she shows sign of this on Tuesday night. I wonder a piece of sparkler is stuck somewhere.  Im getting more and more nervous now.  

     

    Labs are notorious for doing stuff like that. I wouldn't wait on it. Once those intestines start bunching up around something, that's a bad deal. I would get her in, if anything, just for your peace of mind.

    • Like 2
  7. Yeah, I would take her to the vet. Having her appetite is a good thing, but that salivation can be a sign of a foreign body, which is no bueno, and the longer you wait, the worse it gets. My wife is a vet, and I can't tell you the number of animals she has lost because people waited too long to bring them in. It's much better to pay the exam fee and play it safe.

    • Like 2
  8. Some of the old Tree Brand knives (German made) were really good, I have a couple. However, most of what I've heard is that most Boker knives today are crap. I think they've moved some production to China and South America (which it looks like is what this knife is). I will say, I'm a sucker for a stag handle, but if the blade is junk...

  9. The future of firearms is here! Soon, they will make a cartridge with the bullet included, and that will be a game changer. Just imagine if someone were to develop a technology that would allow these combined primer/powder/bullet cartridges to be fired one right after another, either through a manual slide or bolt, or even through an automatic process using inertia or expelled gases. To think what the future holds!

    • Like 1
    • Haha 2
  10. On 1/14/2020 at 1:22 PM, Nomad said:

    All went well, breakfast was almost over, when he worked up the courage to ask . I didn’t leave him hanging welcomed him to the family right away , we drove together to the house so we could talk more .

    Lot of changes , he lives a little bit away and now is moving here, plus  new house , and he just got a new job, a  Union trade job , some travel and has to take courses a night . 
     

    Plus now I’ll have a house to, paint , regrade some land, add and change some outlets , add insulation to attic .......

    We’ll see if he becomes a hunter , think he’s open to, it though .

    That is great, congratulations! I'm glad you didn't make it painful.

    • Like 1
  11. I grew up field trialing UKC beagles. Some of my favorite childhood memories are of handling dogs for the old guys in the clubs. If I was lucky, they'd pay me with a soda :)

    I'll always have a soft spot in my heart for beagles, but dad never let the hunting dogs in the house, he said it would make them lazy. I know several people who have beagles as pets, and outside of barking (they are a hound) they are great house dogs. 

    I grew up with terriers in the house, Miniature Schnauzers first, then Wire Haired Fox Terriers, which my parents still breed and sell. I know that I'll always have a terrier in my life, they are such smart, tenacious, and all around, good dogs. 

    We also have a pug and an English Bulldog. Their smushed faces aren't built for hunting, but they are good family members :) 

    • Like 2
  12. 19 hours ago, wooly said:

    I had to run out and pull our blind from hunting season this afternoon, so I decided to go for a quick hike around the block before I got around to that. Spotted an old skull first and could tell the tines were pretty chewed up, but then I saw a tine sticking up beside it a few feet away and figured that had to be the broken piece. Nope.... first fresh shed antler of the year from another buck laying right next to it just as it lays in the first few pics! Felt AWESOME to get back out there and find some bone again!

    DSC_0080.thumb.JPG.b2f2f52bbab98663f321c61c19a7740c.JPG

    DSC_0081.thumb.JPG.8cddb51059bb819bcceb36ea4509e30e.JPG

    DSC_0083.thumb.JPG.193c570c78d87b9c0a41e7bc4d237c64.JPG

    DSC_0085.thumb.JPG.a37917da46954b1ef8c06e7370ff9c00.JPG

    DSC_0089.thumb.JPG.1bb6246e4a9662bff307c73cc346ba2d.JPG

    Nice finds!

    • Like 1
  13. 1 hour ago, crappyice said:


    His books, like his life, are fraught with alcoholism, depression and sadness. But man he could tell a story


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

    I got to visit his childhood home in Oak Park, IL near Chicago. Very interesting. What a life, and the main thing that I remember learning is that guy could weave a lie. They talked about the evolution of his story about being wounded WWI. It essentially changed from him delivering candy bars to the front line and being hit, to him charging the trenches and being taken down by machine gun fire while carrying out wounded soldiers :)

    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...