Jump to content

Top ramen

Members
  • Posts

    91
  • Joined

  • Last visited

 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 Top ramen

  1. I switched a 30-30 to 38-55 a few years back due to Ohio rifle laws, too weird to explain. Anyways, if I had the opportunity for another lever action it would be .44magnum and never look back,,,,, or too far down a gas line or power line. Keep kills shots at respectable distance and be quite content.

    bring out the old 30-06 for sniping from a sitting spot.

    • Like 1
  2. Sold a .44 revolver that I thought I needed for deer hunting two years ago. Never really liked hunting with it though. OH just went to pistol caliber rifles for deer so I am saving for a Henry Big Boy in .44 mag.

    Still love my remington 700 in 30-06 for NY bear and deer.

  3. Barnes expander spit-fire TMZ .50-250gr over 96grains blackthorn 209. This one entered the brisket of a decent buck while he was standing and looking at me. Found this in the liver after it bounced around his chest awhile.

    post-2411-0-59554900-1409007986_thumb.jp

  4. I should mention standing cornfields. In Ohio there is a huge quantity of standing food in the form if corn. I spot and stalked once through 120 acres of corn. Very tedious as I place my head into row and look left and right and keep moving 1 row at a time. My nerves were shot, neck sore and didn't see anything.

    Next time I'll sit on the edge trails in and around those fields.

  5. I would like to be able to sit longer than I do. When hunting deer in Ohio and southern tier on NY, I sit and wait. I find that when I sit from 5:am through the morning the changing light if dawn really makes me re scan and redefine spots that look like deer/ deer leg, etc. I also like when the deer come in during dark and I can hear where they bed down, and in the dawns light, I try to sneak upon them. Pretty neat. Mostly just sit.

    In the Adirondacks, I feel the need to move and explore in addition to hunting. I know this is counter productive but it is so vast that my curiosity gets the best if me .

    I did get a nice buck during the remnants of a hurricane. I sat for 4 hours in the wind and rain, stood up, and bingo, a nice buck 30 yards from my. He was eating and grazing in a draw I couldn't see when sitting. He saw me, challenged me with a foot stomp- I responded with and arrow through the lungs. I wasn't expecting a deer at that point- just wanted to go home.

  6. I do have a spot in mind. There is a beaver dam that usually has multiple piles of scat. I suspect that the extensive beaver meadow is crossed at the dam.

    I also heard of calling a long time and if I stop that the bear may turn off completely to the call. I may also use my mojo outdoors motion device with rabbit scent on it.

    I will report my experience.

  7. I have been hunting the Adirondacks for years and my father has been hunting for decades before I was thought of. These past few years, my brother, Brother-in-laws, nephews, and now my son are going. Needless to say, we have never bagged a bear- just lot's of beer and good times. We typically are out for 3-4 days. A few shots have been made through the years without connecting- Running shot after scaring them up.

    I am getting an itch to actually bag one of these bear this year.

     

    I tried honey burns, scent covers, etc.

     

    I own an electronic caller that I use for coyote, and an electronic motion device- Should I consider switching tactics (or actually using a tactic) and call for a bear this year.

     

    Thinking of a dying / distressed rabbit, or fawn in distress (not sure if it would work in fall)

     

    Any experience?

     

     

  8. Blackhorn 209 is a great black powder substitute. I used Pyrodex pellets in my T/C in the past and could hardly load a second or third round without cleaning. Blackhorn 209 shots like black powder but does not foul like blackpowder. It cleans easily with water or conventional solvents. The price I paid this past spring was $32.00 for a 10 Oz container. The powder is extremely light so the weight of the container is misleading- You actually get more loads from that container than other powders. 

     

    Great Stuff.

     

    6ML by volume = @96gr blackpowder by volume.

  9. as i said before i pay for my tags it should be up too me too shot what i want im not i trophy hunter i like hunting for the extra meat thats why i take does i think ever one should be able too pick what they want too shoot

    Agreed. I impose my own antler restrictions, as do most others. Your standards of a trophy may differ greatly from someone who is feeding several at home or a hunter that has two days off to spend outdoors.

    My previous 4-6 hours comment is based upon recommendations from 'hunting experts' and hunting celebrities.

    • Like 1
  10. Give me two months to shoot a deer with any implement and I'll hold out for a big one. Give me a couple of weeks which include three weekends and I'll blast whatever comes along (I won't have to wait 4-6 hours to recover or let an animal slowly bleed to death either).

  11. I understand that more hunters want bigger deer, huge racks, and older bucks harvested. Well, this is NY, not an agricultural state but a forested state. You might have gotten bigger bucks if the state supported farmers and had better tax incentives for land that remains farmed. The problem is not the killing if yearlings but rather the expectation of monster bucks in a landscape filled with forest and less fields.

    You want bigger deer, the killing of a minority of little deer is nothing when we don't allow our farmers to prosper and for the land to bare it's fruits

    • Like 3
  12. I sit all day, starting very early....... If you check your moon rise and moon set times, often I will enter the woods while moon is up, watch it set, darkness, darkness, cold, darkness, sunrise. (pretty spooky to be in the dark woods)

    If you are in a pressured area the other hunters will drive them to you...

    Best wishes.

  13. Ah well.....One can only hope that some member of your family runs afoul of the law in Sheriff Joe's jurisdiction!!

    I don't know about wishing someone ill times.

     

     

     

    The tent city is just like the one Sheriff Joe lived in while in Korea.

    The food is the same food he will eat also.

    And a bigot is someone who treats someone unfairly or unjustly. Well, it seems pretty fair from where I stand.

     

    When I lived in Glendale, AZ, the volunteer deputies (aka retired folks) would patrol and provide exceptional services that our cities and towns would be envious of. they would drive home someone in need, place a patrol car at bad intersections, provide traffic control before major problems evolved. sheriff Joe has also hired former inmates for non-law enforcement personnel.

  14. Now that the bow is dusted off......... I think the most important skill in bow hunting is tracking a deer and allowing oneself the time to do it properly.. I have felt pressured by work and family obligations to not sit and wait for the deer to expire and I am afraid I have chased off an injured animal. This is not meant to be a confession but I am sure this happens all too often and regardless of what one thinks is an ethical shot or shooting ability we need to also focus on the recovery of the animal.


    Find the time to do it right.


×
×
  • Create New...