Pete Collin
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Everything posted by Pete Collin
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Hello All, Last week was the biggest forest fire I have heard of in 30 years living in this state.
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I think I am getting the gist of the grid. They pertain to the layout of Township/Ranges in unincorporated land (the boonies). When I worked in Northwestern Maine, the Delorme Maps would call the square townships something like "T34 R24". At the Scott Paper office, they gave names to the townships because it was better to say "I'll be up to Hobbstown today, around Whipple Pond" than to say "I'll be in Township 34 Range 24!" So that grid would not pertain to anything we do in oh-so-domestic western NY. I was unsure if it had some military application.
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Hello All, I have this old compass that I never use, but am curious about. It is made by Keuffer + Essel, who made a lot of precision equipment like drafting tools, etc. It's not a good woods compass, because it is rather bulky and heavy. It takes the needle a long time to settle down. It is well made, and the big dial could give you some precision, but it doesn't have a mirror, and the "gunsight" on the lid isn't really good to shoot a line with. There is no fixture on the underside to attach to a staff. The strangest thing is the chart inside the lid. A grid with numbered cells from 1 to 36. I googled around and couldn't find what it's for. I assume it's for some kind of point sampling, like to take ore samples, soil samples, or forestry measurements? Tick off each plot with a crayon as you go? Maybe one of you know something about this cool old artifact.
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Land of the Giant Oaks
Pete Collin replied to Pete Collin's topic in Land Management, Food Plots and QDM
One thing that I didn't quite get across in my video is that there is a difference between finding one big tree and being in a forest of them. You can look for girthy trees in yards, parks and cemeteries because they won't get harvested for sawlogs, and being in the wide open allows them to put on a wide, spreading crown and grow fast. It is far more unusual to be surrounded by acres of trees that are thick-trunked, tall, straight (thus making for good sawlogs), and available to harvest. I live right next door to Letchworth State Park. There are sections that have drop-dead wonderful sawtimber that will never get cut. I love hiking through them and gawking at the sheer board footage. People sometimes say, "Don't you wish you could log the park?" But I don't really. There's nothing wrong with setting aside a few places where we can display what a forest is capable of becoming. And anybody who owns some land and a vision for the future can work on their little corner of paradise. -
Land of the Giant Oaks
Pete Collin replied to Pete Collin's topic in Land Management, Food Plots and QDM
Which is why I have a job. -
Land of the Giant Oaks
Pete Collin replied to Pete Collin's topic in Land Management, Food Plots and QDM
Oh! Was that the farm that had the spy apple orchard on it? That was so long ago! -
Land of the Giant Oaks
Pete Collin replied to Pete Collin's topic in Land Management, Food Plots and QDM
Really? Whose? -
On this site we can show off big racks, long beards and long spurs. Here's a video showing off some giant oak trees.
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Tree Identification Video - Butternut
Pete Collin replied to Pete Collin's topic in General Chit Chat
Tulip poplar is far more prevalent in PA and south than it is in NY. But it shows up in pockets - finger lakes, along the Erie and Ontario lakeshores, I find some in Letchworth Park. -
Tree Identification Video - Butternut
Pete Collin replied to Pete Collin's topic in General Chit Chat
Tulip poplar. -
I normally run 2 drift bags. But on a previous trip, a frayed knot made me lose one of them. So I improvised until I could sew a second one out of an old cloth shower curtain.
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Yes. Once I got a small Atlantic salmon, and another time i got a nice Chinook while jigging. But I target the lake trout.
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Tree Identification Video - Butternut
Pete Collin replied to Pete Collin's topic in General Chit Chat
Nice clock! I lost my dad this spring. He made over 100 clocks in his shop. I have 2 of them. -
Tree Identification Video - Butternut
Pete Collin replied to Pete Collin's topic in General Chit Chat
The shot where I show a bunch of gnawed nut shells on the ground is a mixture of walnut and butternut. I have 2 walnuts growing in my yard that are volunteer trees. They are far enough away from any potential parent trees that I assume a squirrel buried the nuts there and forgot about them. Could be a chipmunk, too. -
Tree Identification Video - Butternut
Pete Collin replied to Pete Collin's topic in General Chit Chat
Yes, I have done a number of them over the years. Just look through my YouTube channel that is under my name. -
Hello All, Last week I was working in a woods that had quite a few butternut - a tree that can be somewhat hard to find in NY. Used that opportunity to make a video.
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I have a stack of books on shooting and archery that are free to anybody that wants them.
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Hello All, Please let me know if I'm out of line putting these forestry videos up here. Just figured hunters who own their own woods might find them interesting.
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Thanks everyone for your replies. I wound up ordering socks from Darn Tough. Two kinds - the Hike/Trek and the Tactical. Turns out the Tactical are the ones I am looking for - very thick and cushioney. Also, they are the only sock company that makes very big sizes (I am a 15). It's hard to order clothes online when you can't hold them in your hand to judge the feel and materials.
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This may seem like an obscure topic, but it is important to me. Do any of you have favorite socks for doing lots of walking in the woods? I work outside, with lots of walking. for years the absolute best socks in the world were Bass Pro Shops' Red Head brand. They are thick, but soft. I wore them summer and winter because they cushion your feet and prevent blisters. Before they came around I would often double up on socks for a day in the woods, which makes you go through your sock drawer quickly. I am ready to order another batch, and I noticed that the RedHead socks didn't get good ratings on Cabela's own web page. Turns out, like everything else, people complained that they cheapened the manufacturing process, and the ones they sell today aren't as good. So what other socks out there are worth getting for long days of walking off-trail?
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In my interview with the lady from the research clinic, I asked, "Now, you're not going to infect me with Lyme to see if the shot works, are you??"
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Hello All, I just signed up to be a test subject for a vaccine that is being developed for Lyme disease. This is something I think about all the time, because I work outdoors and pull at least a couple of ticks out of myself every season. They still would like volunteers, so I will post the info for anybody who wants to sign up. Brief details: it is 18 months long, you go in once every couple of months to get a shot, they do pay you $800 for your involvement. There is a 1/3 chance the shot you get is a placebo. This is phase 2 of the clinical trials. I figured hunters and anybody whose job places them at a higher risk for Lyme should be interested in this. Rochester Clinical Research, Inc500 Helendale Road, Suite L20Rochester, NY 14609Phone: 585-288-0890FAX: 585-288-0893Website: www.rcrclinical.com
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Well that's understandable. We have shagbark, shellbark, bitternut, pignut, and mockernut hickory. they can be diffficult to differentiate. And in the logging world, There's shagbark and everything else, as far as the pricing is concerned, giving loggers little incentive to discern between them. Believe it or not, when bitternut hickory grows real well, you can veneer the butt log.