wolc123
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Everything posted by wolc123
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I agree that the eyes are the most important part of the mount. Too many guys these days get hung up on the whiskers, eyelashes, pedestals, leaves, sticks, weird poses, and other nonsense. If they only put half that effort into getting the eyes right, they would have some happier customers. I have had several shoulder mounts done, but I am really only completely satisfied with one. My uncle, who mounted that one (9-point on left) was the taxidermist at the city science museum. He did a few whitetails on the side, for friends and relatives. It has been more than 30 years, but I still remember him telling me that "getting the eyes right", was the toughest part. He has been gone for a while now (rest his soul) and none of the guys I have used since have quite figured it out. There is a real "knack" for making them look alive. He had it down, and it looks like Biz's guy does also. p.s: the little 10 pointer on the right looks like he just finished a fat one.
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The only living Democrat who I could support is Jimmy Carter (because he is a Christian and a hunter). A couple of dead ones I would have supported were Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman. All the rest did or are doing this country more harm than good. I am very thankful that they only hold 1/6 of the power in Washington and hopefully they will loose their hold on that in the next election.
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That is similar to what I do. There is no need to dump lots of cash to gain the same effect. I bought a used stationary bike (Life Fitness Life Cycle 3500) for $ 10 at a garage sale about 6 years ago. It has an electronic adjustment for various resistance levels. I always use it on the "random" setting, with the resistance on the maximum setting (12). I do that for 20 minutes, 3 nights per week. After (6) years of that, it has yet to give me any trouble. For simultaneous "entertainment", I have a large flat-screen TV, VCR and DVD player. I prefer the VCR tapes and they can usually be had for free or nearly so. I am just starting "Roots" now (my wife picked up the 6 tape set for $ 1 at the local thrift store). I also have it on DVD but I definitely prefer the VCR tapes.
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I am thankful that this is an even-numbered year, so I should be good for a button buck this season.
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It would be fairer if the charge were based on waist circumference.
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I think last season's deer kill was up a bit, due to good snow during gun season. Fortunately, the cold and snow petered out after late ML season, and this winter might turn out to be the most mild on record. That should result in our deer numbers being good again this fall, despite the big kill last fall. The only ones really getting screwed by this weather pattern (snow during gun & ML season, not much after) are the snowmobilers and skiers.
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That is an excellent mount. The eyes look just right. That seems to be the most difficult part of making a realistic looking mount.
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I seem to recall that was one of the first things that Trump attempted to do after he was elected but the effort was defeated by an uncooperative congress. I believe that he will try again in his second term, when he should be greatly strengthened by a much more cooperative congress. Considering the ludicrously dismal field of candidates that the Democrats are fielding for the Presidential election this year, it is almost certain that Democratic turnout will be down, and even many of those who do show up to vote, are likely to switch sides. Heck, even on this thread, some have already stated their plans on doing that. A pleasant side-effect, of the horrible slate of Democrat presidential candidates this year, will be big Republican gains in both the Senate and the House, as many ride into office on Trump's coattails.
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What is your stance on abortion ? Do you realize that there have been about 10 times as many of those in the USA, since Roe vs Wade, than the number of post-birth human exterminations carried out by the Nazis during WW II. The single best thing about the current collapse of the Democratic party will be the end of this 10 X Holocaust. Ethically, the abortions are even worse because the innocent victims had zero chance of escape.
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US Grant (depending on your definition of "modern").
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I am very thankful for the current crop of Democratic candidates. It is hard to imagine how Trump could not win another huge electoral blowout, since the entire field this year is weaker than Hillary was in 2016. The only one who might even have an outside shot at a popular vote win is Bernie. Thankfully we are a constitutional republic, not a true democracy, so there will be no worry of a "nail-biter" this year. The best part for me will be the additional, conservative Supreme court justices that Trump will appoint over the next (4) years, and the end of the "Roe vs Wade" BS that has been going on in this country for so long.
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Cool, my kids have often decorated one of mine with a red nose for Christmas, they could skip that step with that one.
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Very much so. I always wondered why they called those from cattle "Rocky mountain oysters", until I gave them a try, with lots of pepper. I learned that trick from Steve Rinella from the "Meateater" video series on Netflicks. He cooks up some from antelope in one episode and mule deer in another. Both times, he used butter and "lots of pepper" when frying them up. The pepper is definitely the key (I used olive oil instead of butter). What keeps most folks from giving them a try, is a lack of the primary ingredient. If you ever get a pair yourself, and decide to try them, don't forget to slit thru the outer membrane first, or they will "explode" in the frying pan. No problem, oddly enough, my wife just mentioned that she would like to try a new meatball recipe (we have an abundance of ground venison in the freezer). Maybe she can give that "porcupine" one a try.
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I have killed a couple porcupines, including one up in Quebec about 30 years ago, while I was on a moose/bear hunt, and one last October up in the Adirondacks. They were both big, but I did not check to see if they had balls. I see that recipe is not about that kind of "balls" though. The rice must stick out of the ground beef "meatballs" and resemble the quills of a porcupine. The secret ingredient, to make the "real" balls of any species taste similar to sea oysters, is lots of black pepper.
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I had to twist my wife's arm a little on Wednesday, to convince her to make me pickled deer hearts, like she has done every year for Valentine's day, since we have been married. I only got two last year, so I asked that she add a couple of beef tongues to the mix. She dutifully performed the task. I got her a half dozen yellow roses, from the local produce market, on my way home from work yesterday. Those are her favorites. She was overjoyed with that $ 10.99 token of my appreciation. I am enjoying some of that pickled tongue right now as I type, and saving the heart to take Ice-fishing up at the in-laws this weekend. They love the heart but won't touch the tongue. I always preferred tongue and it is too bad that deer don't have bigger ones. Pickled moose tongue is my all time favorite wild game meat (they are bigger than beef tongues), but those from Black Angus or Holstein is almost as good. My wife does not mind preparing the hearts, but always complains a bit about the tongues. She says that skinning them, after they are cooked, grosses her out a bit. It has been a few years, since I had tongue on Valentine's day, so I will agree that this was the best Valentine's day in a long time.
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I have driven only GM trucks (about 50/50 Chevy & GMC's), since 1980, and none have left me stranded. That is 40 years with no tow -trucks or flat-beds, so I really can't complain. I did have a close call one time with my 2000 Chevy Silverado. My wife was backing it up to the boat launch, up on the St Lawrence river about 5 years ago, as I waited in the boat out on the river. I heard a loud "bang" and she stopped suddenly, then started yelling for me to come and see what happened. The drive shaft had broken off (from lots of corrosion), just forward of the rear universal. Fortunately, that truck was four wheel drive. I pulled what was left of the shaft out the transfer case, tossed it into the back of the truck, engaged the front-axle, and pulled the boat out with it like that. I nursed it over to a local mechanic, and he welded me up a new shaft the next day. The truck handled very well as a front-wheel drive. When corrosion started to get the best of the frame a couple years ago, I was planning on taking that truck off the road and making a field vehicle out of it. Instead, I gave it to my father-in law, who still uses it for plowing snow up at his retirement home in the Adirondacks. He got the frame welded up and has taken care of most of the other corrosion issues in his "spare-time" such that it is almost as good as new now. I still get to use it while hunting up there every fall. I do save a lot of money in gas by driving my little Chevy Sonic back and forth up there these days. Thanks to climate change, I really don't miss the 4 wheel drive at home in western NY. Our current Chevy Silverado is a 2000, 2wd, "rustless" extended-cab from Florida. As long as I can keep that one rust-proofed, I should have no further need for a four wheel drive.
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Soy, Corn, PTT Seed questions
wolc123 replied to Geno C's topic in Land Management, Food Plots and QDM
Corn is the only spring crop that I put in for deer. I think you can get up to two bags of RR corn thru NWTF if you join, at $ 50 per bag (compared to aprox $250 per bag retail price). I have always used free, leftover seed that I picked up from farmer family and friends. It keeps very well if stored properly (I have not noticed any drop in germination when stored up to 5 years on a shelf in my basement). I have also never paid for soybeans, but they don't store nearly as well due to their high oil content. I only planted them once in the spring and that was enough to teach me to not try that again. The main problem for me was they drew in lots of coyotes. I would much prefer the deer to be somewhere else during fawning season (whitetail fawns may be the coyotes #1 preferred food source in NY state). Soybeans are most attractive to deer during their early growing stage. Even the coyotes eat the plants at that stage (probably because they are so high in protein). Until NY state opens up a year round coyote season, I will not plant soybeans again in the spring. It is always easy for me to find free soybeans at the end of planting season (June). I use them the same year, mixed with white clover, and winter wheat, which I plant starting around September 1st. Those sprouting soybeans draw deer to those plots like candy, and "climate-change" has resulted in late frosts, which keep them drawing deer to the plots into October (when you can kill them). They don't survive the first hard frost, but usually they have completed their mission by that time anyhow. Corn is the only plot that holds deer on my ground after gun-season begins. Obviously, that is because it provides cover in addition to exactly the type of food they seek at that time (carbs). Last year was the first in the past 25 seasons that I did not plant corn and I did not even see a deer on my land after the first shot was fired on opening day. It was way too wet in the spring for me to get any in. Fortunately, the soybean/wheat/clover plots kicked some but, and the best 8-point that I have ever taken fell dead to my crossbow bolt (with a bellyfull of that stuff) 2 weeks before gun season opened. He was also the only deer I have ever killed in WMU 9F, that did not have any corn in his stomach. Here is how I found him, just off the edge of one of those plots: -
Fla. man drives van through GOP voter registration booth
wolc123 replied to Nomad's topic in General Chit Chat
It is no wonder that Democrats are coming unhinged, given all of the stunning defeats that they have suffered over the last week. -
So you think you know coyotes in NY? Do you?
wolc123 replied to Rattler's topic in Small Game and Predator Hunting
Clearly, this one ^ ^ ^ is a Western coyote, based on the desert features usually shown in the cartoon. NY has the Eastern variety, which is part wolf and much bigger. This is pretty well explained in the opening video that Rattler posted. I have never killed a coyote while deer hunting, but I could have last year, if I had only opened the back window of my blind (faced the neighbor's field), like I did the side ones, as soon as I got in there well before sunrise. They were so froze up that it made a heck of a racket, and I had a hard time opening them. I did not bother with the back window, because I prefer not shooting deer that are not on my property. I regretted that decision, when a big red-phase coyote showed up in the middle of that field, 75 yards away, about 2 hours after sunrise. I never seen one move as fast as that one did when I tried to crack open that window. He was gone, over the horizon, before I could get to my gun. I very rarely hunt turkeys in the spring, but I do recall a very large male coon approached me in the woods one morning as I was making hen calls. It was so long ago, that I can't clearly recall the details of what happened next, but I think it might have involved a shovel. I may have had similar experiences with young coyotes and a .22 rimfire, in the summer after the hay was cut, but again too long ago to remember clearly. I did kill on big male coyote, legally, from my bedroom window, over a carcass pile, around midnight, with a .22 from about 100 yards away. I took a few shots at his mate as she bolted off after the initial shot but no signs of a hit in the snow on her. His hide got tanned and now hangs next to my bar in our billiard room. -
APPARENTLY NOBODY SHOULD BE LIVING IN UPSTATE NY
wolc123 replied to Rattler's topic in General Chit Chat
At least there are a few positives from the high taxes and dysfunctional politics: 1) Less traffic on the roads (many without the gumption, patience, or money to stay in NY have already high-tailed it off to another state). 2) Less competition for available "free" meat (by that I mean fish and game) from able-bodied people. Retirerees don't put as much pressure on those resources. 3) The satisfaction of knowing that more of the money you earn goes to helping others than yourself. That one might not be all that handy here on earth, but will pay off well in the hearafter, and that lasts forever. 4) Lastly, I can take the cold a lot better than the heat, and could never survive South of about Gettysburg PA. For me, the weather here is almost perfect and better on average than any other of the lower 48 and I have been to most of them. -
NYT: Deer Overpopulation Meets Its Match: Women Who Hunt
wolc123 replied to left field's topic in Deer Hunting
I only know a couple. They are very persistant, that is for sure. I had to wait about a half hour past sunset, for them to get back from the woods, on opening day a couple years ago, and help me put my buck on their scale. These two hunt much harder than most of my male hunting friends and have killed more trophy bucks than most of them. Now that I learned the WMU 9F correction multiplier for the PA chest (or heart) girth chart that g-man posted a few years ago, by using the lady's certified scale, I no longer have a need to weigh any more. The old trusty tape measure is always handy and does not need as frequent of a calibration. -
Throw my name in the hat and send it to "Rattler" if drawn. I have no need for a meat slicer but I do appreciate the volunteer fire departments.
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I think a better explanation of Trump's success, is that he has embraced the Christian Agenda, while the Democrats have opposed it. That can be seen by just looking at just one issue (Abortion). Maybe more folks (even non-Christians) would wake up if they could accept the simply-proven medical fact that "new" life begins at conception (1/2 of the "fetuses" DNA comes from the mother and 1/2 from the father). The number of "born" people that were murdered by Hitler and the Nazis in Germany was less than half of those "unborn" who have been murdered in the USA since Row vs Wade. The "unborn" murders were even more evil, because the victims had no chance to escape. I would love top see Trump get 4 more years. The most important reason for that, is to further the Christian agenda, and get a bunch more Conservative judges in place. The Devilratic party has a tough row to hoe. Maybe they don't realize that this country is about 75% Christian, although that may explain why they are so eager to get more illegal immigrants in. They can't win with "the cards in the deck" so they think it is time to bring in more from abroad. The references to Grant and Patton were interesting. Clearly, much of those two's success came from their support of the Christian agenda. Humans are flawed by definition, and those two certainly were (Grant drank to excess a time or two and Patton slapped a soldier). Like it or not, we are stuck with "humans" as our leaders today. Grant was clearly on God's side during the Civil war, which was fought to end slavery. Patton also certainly had His support (remember his prayer for clear sky's to facilitate air-support during the liberation of Bastogne in the battle of the bulge). If the Devilrats think they can win without God, they have another thing coming.
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So you think you know coyotes in NY? Do you?
wolc123 replied to Rattler's topic in Small Game and Predator Hunting
There are some good arguments on both sides of the coywolf controversy. There is no point in talking about Western coyotes, since they don't exist in NY. The positives of having them around, is that they help keep certain nest predators in check (coons, fox, opossum, skunk, weasel, mink, etc), along with some other useless vermin like rats and woodchucks. They also keep deer numbers in check, in densely-populated areas, where hunting is not allowed. That one benefits me every weekday, when I must travel thru such a town, to get to and from work. On the other hand, I can understand some folks hatred of them. If I were struggling to fill my spring turkey tags and noted a coyote coming in to my call and saw a few piles of feathers, indicating their kills of those birds, I might be tempted with SSS. There are too many bugs in the woods for me at that time of year, when I spend all my spare time on the water fishing, so that one don't matter to me at all. If I ever failed to end up with a year's worth of venison for my family by the end of hunting season, I would be pissed. Fortunately, that has not happened yet, so I am ok with the coywolfs. I do appreciate the fact that they take out the weakest of the deer first (primarily fawns, wounded, and rut-weakened bucks). I would rather err on the side of two few coyotes however, so I would vote for a year round season in NY if given the chance. The species could certainly handle the increased hunting pressure. If there were ever to bee "too few" around, they could always readjust the season dates. If you ar unhappy with the current coywolf situation, my suggestion would be to respect the law and try to enjoy the benefits they provide (the biggest one for me is a safe ride on the highways). -
So you think you know coyotes in NY? Do you?
wolc123 replied to Rattler's topic in Small Game and Predator Hunting
I am also for a year round season, but if I were an exclusive "turkey-guy", who had little or no use for deer like Bill, I might reconsider. NY politics is so disfunctional (as evidence by the the crossbow fiasco), that it will require a coyote killing a toddler before a year-round season. I am certain they will "get right on it" after that happens.