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fasteddie

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Everything posted by fasteddie

  1. Got this in an e-mail https://youtu.be/ZA9EW2UKDDQ
  2. My "go to " knife is a Ka-Bar Little Finn with a 3 5/8" blade . I have had it for about 45 years .
  3. My sister in laws ex boyfriend lost his Buck Knife after field dressing a deer . I took my metal detector out the next day and found his knife in the gut pile .
  4. The Gerber knife has a ball on the end . I carry that and a couple other knives . I take a couple of those red plastic flag plastic things that you get at Lowes or Home depot and lay on the ground . When I set a knife down , I place it there or on a plastic shopping bag that I will use to toss my field dressing gloves in when I am done . In 50 years of hunting , I havn't lost a knife ..... Knock on wood ! Thanks for the replies !
  5. I also use the Butt Out Tool . It makes for a neater job by not getting any crap inside . https://youtu.be/3yf7n5pftv8
  6. Thanks , I will give the sternum to the butt a try next time . I have a Gerber Metalius blade that works like a charm slicing down the body once an incision is made . I find that doing it the other way can be somewhat difficult getting pulled away brom the belly to make the incision . I have been using a Gerber Metolius E-Z Open blade to up or down the deer . It has a ball on the end and works real slick . Almost like unzipping the deer .
  7. I was never taught how to field dress a deer .. I learned by reading how to do it . I core out the butt , tie it off then make an incision in the stomach , being careful and cut toward the sternum the cut the other way . I saw a video where the guy started at the sternum and cut the other way . By starting at the sternum he wouldn't be chancing poking the guts when starting out . Does anyone do this ? Have I been doing it wrong for 50 years ? Never too old to learn !
  8. I am hoping that my bow mount camera will at least shot a deer's reaction to a shot . The hard part is remembering to keep the bow up after the shot and following the deer with the bow .
  9. Awesome pics . Thanks for sharing !
  10. Here is a test shot from my stand in Pittsford . I just shot at a clump on the lane . Camera was set at 4X which is the highest setting for the Wildgame Encounter . Not too bad for a $35 purchase . https://youtu.be/5Y4c56YwT3w
  11. I had an EPIC camera that my wife bought be a few years ago . Was worthless on a hat . It had a foam piece that came with it and I mounted it behind my stabilizer on an angle bracket . It sounded like a 22 going off when viewed . I had a hard time telling if the camera was on or not . Shot a doe and thought I was taping but the camera was off . I have since bought a Wildgame Encounter camera . It came with a bracket to mount it behind the stabilizer so I will give it a try this coming season .
  12. Not sure if they still do it but Irondequoit had a program they started a few years ago . They had been paying out several thousands of dollars for off duty police to do a Bait and Shoot . Then they allowed Bow Hunters that passed a shooting test / qualifier to hunt specific areas and there were restrictions as to where and how they could shoot the deer . Anyway , it was a money saver for the town .
  13. fasteddie

    Hello

    Welcome to Hunting NY
  14. I had some of the exercise bands several years ago . You could hold them and go through drawing a bow motions . I would sit in my office and use them a few times a day a couple months before Bow Season . It helped quite a bit .
  15. Since you stated you can't use a climber , I would go with the ladder stand near a well used trail . I personally prefer to have my stand around 15 - 20 yards away from the trail and have had good luck doing that . The stand should be placed for easy access where you can approach it without being seen . Those 2 man ladder stands are nice and roomy ... quite comfortable .
  16. My horse shoes really keep me on my toes !
  17. Welcome to Hunting NY ...........
  18. Hardware stores like "Do It Best" have straps and plastic fittings for the straps . You could make one fairly cheap . The strap material is sold by the foot . You could use a cheap ratchet strap and cut off the excess strapping .
  19. These are difficult to walk on ......
  20. When I check my cameras I carry my little. 380 Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
  21. Sure would . Does taste just fine! Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
  22. Thank you for posting on the Political Topics ................
  23. Oh yeah , the above post was "Copied and Pasted" ................
  24. On 7/10/2015 5:04 PM, Senator Michael F. Nozzolio wrote: A very tough battle was waged. A positive result was achieved. As a result of extensive negotiations throughout the last several weeks, our efforts have been successful. The SAFE Act ammunition database and background check has been stopped by a signed AGREEMENT between Governor Cuomo and State Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan. This Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) agreement is a victory for every law-abiding gun owner in New York State. The ammunition database and background check requirements of the SAFE Act relied on unproven technology, and establishing it would have cost New York State taxpayers upwards of $100 million - a colossal waste of tax dollars. The establishment of this database was an affront to all law abiding gun owners and those who believe as strongly as I do in our 2nd Amendment rights! Under the two-way agreement, the statewide ammunition database program is suspended and “no expenditures of state monies shall be allocated for the purposes of purchasing and installing software, programming and interface required to transmit any record for the purpose of performing an eligibility check” for buying ammunition unless both parties agree to proceed. The database and background check directive in the SAFE Act was offensive to those who cherish our 2nd Amendment rights and will NOT be implemented and the necessary steps to establish it are suspended unless the State Senate provides its express approval. The MOU language formally halts the ammunition background check program, even though Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie of the Bronx refused to participate in our negotiations. Senate Republicans were successful in removing ammunition database allocations proposed by the Governor in the New York State budget but we sought a more official solution. The formal MOU agreement was signed by Governor Cuomo’s Director of State Operations James Malatras, and State Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan. A few months ago, no one would have predicted that we could achieve this agreement from the Governor who pushed this misguided and offensive law through in the first place. The agreement resulted from an all out effort by Senate Republicans and Majority Leader John Flanagan during the just completed negotiations that wrapped up end-of-session issues such as the renewal of the property tax cap, property tax rebate checks for homeowners, Common Core reforms and the evaluation process for teachers. Senator Flanagan kept his word that he would work with us to make real changes to the SAFE Act. He has shown strong leadership in getting positive results that are important to the people of Upstate New York and my Senate district. The repeal of the ammunition background check was a part of legislation I sponsored, (S.5837/A.8196) which contained a number of reform provisions, and was passed in the State Senate this session. Other provisions would allow immediate family members to inherit firearms as part of an estate as long as a background check was conducted; reform the recertification process; and provide more protections for individuals’ data on pistol permits while still requiring the state to release aggregate data; and require the state to provide clearer due process rights. In the State Assembly, which is heavily dominated by New York City, the bill stalled even though it had a Democrat Majority sponsor, Assemblyman Anthony Brindisi from Utica. A total of 26 Assembly members signed onto the legislation, but it failed to be brought up for a vote on the floor, even as an amendment, as requested by Majority Leader John Flanagan. Assemblymen Robert Oaks, Brian Kolb and Phil Palmesano stepped up as co-sponsors, and I commend them for listening to our constituents and doing the right thing. Because the Assembly Speaker refused to agree to our legislation during negotiations, we achieved the next best thing, which was to suspend the ammunition database through the Memorandum of Understanding. Other components of the SAFE Act already have been found to be unconstitutional, and the controversial law is the subject of several lawsuits. The SAFE Act that passed in January 2013 required that sellers must determine a purchaser’s eligibility to possess ammunition by a currently non-existent, on-line State Police operated database. The ongoing costs were to be borne by state taxpayers, who would also be required to pay for the equipment needed to conduct the background checks at each point of sale – literally every retailer across the state that sells ammunition. Thanks to our efforts, these costly, onerous and ineffective requirements have been eliminated. We passed meaningful reforms in the New York State Senate. We also BLOCKED legislation that some have characterized as “SAFE ACT #2”. Our efforts STOPPED a number of anti-2nd Amendment proposals from becoming law, including the following: —DEFEATED a proposal to BAN and confiscate 50 caliber firearms and ammunition: S.2050, Sponsored by Senator Squadron from New York City; —DEFEATED a proposal to REQUIRE, under penalty of law, the locked storage of firearms in the home: S.2491, Sponsored by Senator Krueger from New York City; —BLOCKED from consideration the requirement to MICROSTAMP ammunition: S.1113, Sponsored by Senator Peralta from New York City; —BLOCKED from consideration the requirement that all gun owners purchase expanded and very expensive additional liability insurance: A.5864, Sponsored by Assemblyman Ortiz from New York City. I encourage all who want full repeal of the SAFE Act to stay united and focused on the objective, and keep doing the hard work it takes to repeal a law that passed the State Assembly by a 61 vote margin! We have achieved important FIRST STEPS that put us on the road to FULL REPEAL of the SAFE Act. They are important first steps, but of course more must be done, and I will continue my aggressive efforts and not stop until we achieve FULL REPEAL of the so-called SAFE Act!
  25. Welcome to Hunting NY .......
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