wolc123
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Everything posted by wolc123
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I will use my 300 FPS Barnett Recruit and my Centerpoint Sniper 370, depending on what blind I am hunting. The sniper is considerably faster, but is very front-heavy and needs a good rest. The Recruit handles as easily as my my Ruger 10/22 carbine and can easily be shot offhand. Hopefully, I will punch my archery/ML buck tag up in the Northern zone in October with my ML, and I’ll be after antlerless deer only with my 3rd and 4th dmp tags (available after November 1). It would be nice to kill a buck with the Sniper though. The Recruit worked very well on the 5 or 6 that I killed with it, including the largest bodied antlered buck that I ever measured (43” chest girth). I imagine that the Sniper will be the one that I pick for most hunts this year for that reason, and because the original 2014 string is getting pretty stretched on the Recruit. Plus, almost all of my blinds have real nice rests. Also, I just picked up some shooting sticks which should work well with the Sniper.
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Sounds like a lot of extra time, effort, and money. I just figured out how to make the food that I kill in the wild, taste better than what she can buy in the stores. My wife begs me to spend more time hunting and fishing.
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What will you be carrying for Opening Day?
wolc123 replied to WNYBuckHunter's topic in Rifle and Gun Hunting
For the September 10 early antlerless season gun opener, I will go with my T/C Omega 50 cal ML with old Redfield wide field 2-7X scope, and 240 XTP bullet, driven by (2) 50 gr T7 pellets. That combo has already yielded one DRT antlerless deer on New Year’s Day of this year. I’ll be trying my best to fill (7) tags this year, which could make a record of (8) for me in one calendar year. Both areas I hunt are grossly overpopulated with deer (wmu 9F and 6C) and there are lots of folks out there who would love some venison. I got her all dialed in on the range last Saturday, cleaned good, and she’s right on where I want her. I only have room for one deer at a time in my deer fridge, so there is no point in using repeating weapons in September, when it will be warm. That makes deciding what gun to carry on opening day a very simple decision. -
I caught adult male coon number (5) in a box trap that was baited with stale bread wiped with peanut butter. The bait was gone out of the other box trap and the door was down, but it was empty. Nothing in the dog-proof either. Unfortunately, they wiped out about 1/3 of my 3rd planting of sweetcorn last night, and it was about a week away from being ripe enough to pick. I put fresh bait in three traps back there, hoping to get a few more before they take out the remainder of my sweetcorn. It sure would be nice to get to eat a little of that sweetcorn this year. My 4th and last planting (silver queen) looks like it is about 3 weeks away from being ripe enough to pick. My rain gauge is showing that we got more than an inch since Sunday, which should really help fill out that late corn. It should also add some bushels to my RR fieldcorn out back. Hopefully, enough to make up for what the deer have been eating, starting about a week ago. If the ground dries out enough by this weekend, I think I am going to jump the gun a little bit and get in a couple of wheat/clover plots. I usually wait until after September 1 for that.
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Am I the only one who can't find decent sweet corn ??
wolc123 replied to Pygmy's topic in Game Recipes / Cooking
Between the drought, the weeds, and the coons, I lost my first two plantings. Last year, my first (cappuccino) was very good, and the second (bodacious) sucked. I am anxiously awaiting my 3rd (kandy corn) and 4th (silver queen) plantings this year. Those later varieties were always my favorites. -
I never used binoculars much for hunting, but I think I am going to carry my grandma’s old 7x35 Tasco, that she use to watch birds with, during the early September antlerless season. I bought the old Bushnell 10 x 50 many years ago, and they no longer focus clearly. The Tascos are crystal clear, but were lacking a lanyard. Now I am good to go: I don’t think they would hold up to cold weather hunting conditions, but they should be fine in mid September.
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That’s about how I use one. It gets a little trickier when roads follow the course of rivers, streams, or around peaks and valleys. I don’t run into that too often at my current spot up in the northern zone. The main paved road I take to camp up there runs almost east-west and the main gravel road into camp, off that runs basically north-south. Even the ridges run basically north south or east west. A couple other spots that I hunted up there were much trickier. It’s even easier for me at my two spots in the southern zone . Our road runs east-west and my parents runs north-south, and it’s all about as flat as a pancake. Even the creek was rerouted, perfectly east-west across our farm, back in the 1970’s. The county did that to eliminate two bridges on our road. “Google maps” road view still shows the old course of the creek, but the satellite view reveals the current one. If you are unfamiliar with the roads, then you might run into the problem of not knowing which way to go, when you get back to the road. I mostly only use the compass, when I track a deer into some heavy cover, and I loose my sense of direction. They often head for heavy cover, after you hit them with an arrow or a bullet, and if you spook them with your scent, sound, or sight. if you are going to follow deer tracks, hoping to get a shot at one, then I would suggest getting a topo map, of the area you hunt, and practice using that with your compass.
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After lunch with my parents at their place, I cut a big locust branch that they wanted down in the back yard. I used the remaining gas in my saw to clear a downed dead ash from one of the woods trails that my dad wanted to get thru with his bush hog. I brought that wood home and loaded it on my “to be split” trailer, out behind the barn. I hope to get over there one more time, before the September 10 antlerless gun opener, and cut up another truckload of dead ash (for our winter heating supply), and get my $ 8 padded swivel chair (from which I killed (3) deer in the past year) back up in the clover plot / woods edge stand, that’s right behind their house. My parents are my “trail cameras” over there. Dad mentioned seeing two does regularly on that plot, one with a large fawn (she’s the one I want), and another with a small one. I could only hunt one weekend of the early antlerless gun season last year, and that’s where I killed my deer. I jumped in the pool when I got home after I unloaded the wood (I use it more for bathing after hot dirty work, than for swimming) . It beats the heck out of dirtying up the shower in the house. Pool filter cartridges are cheap and easily replaced. We have had a nice, light steady rain at home over the last hour or two. I took the opportunity to bush hog (3) old clover plots, and the banks of my pond. I like to try to catch that at the low water level for the year and I think this is it from the looks of the weather forecast for this week. My home-made tractor canopy works great for sun and rain. Not so well for bees though.
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It was too damn muggy in the house last night, so I slept out in the camper, which is in the pole barn (it has an air-conditioner which works ok on the 20 amp outlet that I have it plugged into out here). Right now, I have that ac turned off, and a window cranked open, so that I can listen to the pleasant sound of rain on the tin barn roof. That rain arrived just in the nick of time. Now I can bush-hog my old clover plots, so that they will be super tasty and attractive to the deer, for the September 10th antlerless gun season opener.
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I broke open a yellow jacket nest, while bush-hogging along the edge of a ditch about a month ago. In about 45 years of bush-hogging with open-station tractors, that was the first and only time that I got stung. Fortunately, just once on my back, but it was pretty painful. What sucked about it, was at the same time and in the same place, I lost the tail wheel on my bush-hog. The pin must wave vibrated out, and it fell down into the ditch right next to the broken open nest of angry yellow jackets. I got stung when I drove back to look for the missing wheel. I have to believe that I have broken plenty more nests open thru the years, but as long as I kept on going at a good pace, I never got stung before.
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This is the one I am after on the 10th. Check out those back straps. Her fawn looks to be plenty big to make it on it’s own after she makes the trip to deer Heaven (my family’s food supply). That would be a 20 yard shot from the blind I moved yesterday.
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I am really looking forward to getting out there on September 10th. We ought to be just about out of ground venison by then. I got the last of my shotgun zone deer guns sighted in good today, a couple of blinds placed, and shooting lanes trimmed. I am going to pull a coon trap that I had in my back corn plot tomorrow, and try to minimize my presence back there, until September 10. I have been driving back to check that trap every day for the last couple weeks. Hopefully, the does will be very well acclimated to the blinds and trimmed shooting lanes by then. I just need to decide on what gun to take. I am leaning towards my T/C Omega 50 cal ML for several reasons: First, I have no intention on trying for a double, even though I have two dmp’s tags. It will be warm and there is only room for one in my deer fridge. Second, the old Redfield wide field 2-7 scope on that ML is much nicer than the new Leupold/Redfield 2-7 on my Marlin 512. Third, I have at least 4 times as much ammo (bullets, powder, primers) for it and it costs at least 4 times less per shot. Fourth, it kicks a lot less. Fifth, I am very confident in it, having already killed a deer with it on January 1st of this year. The downsides are not having two quick follow-up shots, like I get with my Marlin 512, or four even quicker ones like I get with my Ithaca 37 16 ga or Remington 870 12 ga. It is also just a smidge more of a pain to clean (I use T7 powder). Cleaning has got way better, since I started using Traditions foaming bore cleaner and a bore snake.
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Busy morning today. I put the bush hog on, as a counterweight, then cut the shooting range nice and low. I used my medium fork extensions on the loader to reposition a truck cap blind. It took my a while to get the floor within half a bubble of perfectly level, but it turned out ok. I will look for a north wind to hunt this spot. Hopefully, we get one between September 10 and 18th, and the old doe that I saw here last week shows up again in the same spot. Besides a shot that way (to the south), I can get a hundred yard shot to the east, from the back door, and a hundred yard shot to the east, from the front slider. I doubt I will open the south side slider, because there is thick brush that way and the property line is only about 15 yards away, After placing that stand, I drove back to the house and filled the Durango’s cargo hold with guns, shooting supplies, a big swivel chair, and my pop up blind. When I got back to the range, the only thing I forgot was my hearing protection. No big deal, as the great suspension on that Durango made for a quick trip back to get it. I won’t even shoot a .22 on the range without hearing protection. That’s my recoil pad lying next to the ear plugs on the 50 yard bench. I always keep that in my shooting box. It tames the crap out of the hard kickers like my Ithaca 16 featherlight and the 870 12 gauge. The Marlin 512 is heavy enough, that it don’t kick too bad, as is the T/C Omega, which kicks about the same as the Ruger 10/22. The shooting conditions were a lot better this morning, than last time I tried. It was quite hot, but there was no wind and no mosquitoes. I started with my Marlin 512 and used (3) SST’s to get it dialed in . It is now adjusted to 2” high at 100 yards, and 3” high at 50. I have (18) SST’s left. Next, I checked my T/C Omega ML at 50 yards and found that it was about 3” low. A quick adjustment brought 1” high (where I wanted it at 50), so 2 shots and done with that one. I changed targets and fired a 3 shot burst with my Ruger 10/22 and hollow point Rem Yellow jackets . The 2” diameter group was centered 1/2 “ to the left and 1” above the bull, and I made no adjustment. I ended the range session with a “one and done” 50 yards shot with my short 12 gauge open-sighted Remington 870. The Federal classic foster slug punched thru 3/4” high and 2” to the right. As far as the guns go, I am all set for the September 10 opener now. I will probably flip a coin between the Marlin 512 and the ML at home. I have lots of ammo for the ML, but it is more of a pain to clean. The barrel is soaking now, with Traditions foaming bore cleaner. I won’t clean the other guns until September 18. I will go with my Ithaca 16, over at my parents place. I also have lots of slugs for that and it always shoots very well on my grandfather’s old farm. Maybe that’s because he was the original owner of the gun. I would like to take one mature doe from there and another at home, a week apart. When I finished shooting, I placed the pop up blind, put the padded swivel chair in it, and staked it down. From that position, I can get a 200 yard shot down the gas line or down my range, a 15 yard shot to the turnip plot, or 20 yard shot to the corn. I will need an east or north east wind to hunt it. After that, I trimmed some brush around a “natural” blind near the center, that can be hunted in almost any wind. Some of that brush was poison ivy, so I sped back to the house, threw my clothes in the wash , put on shorts, and jumped in the pool to wash off all that nasty oil. I’ll know tomorrow if I got it all.
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Coleman 6875w Generator With 50' 30amp cord
wolc123 replied to Lawdwaz's topic in Non Hunting Items For Sale and Trade
I will pay $ 40 for the cord if you’d sell it separate , plus a couple cream ales (or Ruby reds), and a frozen, vacuum sealed pack of 2022 button buck back strap, if you drop it off. -
Official 2022 Fall Plots Thread
wolc123 replied to Five Seasons's topic in Land Management, Food Plots and QDM
I have yet to kill a deer in wmu 9F, that didn’t have a belly full of corn, however the one year I didn’t get any planted at our place (2019), was the year that I killed my best archery season buck here (on a two year old clover plot). I have not killed a deer here since then, despite some pretty good-looking plots. They definitely keep deer around, and hunting is a lot more fun, when you are seeing some. -
I think that’s what I paid each ,for a two box limit, at Runnings a couple months ago when they had them.
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The vermin must have really been out last night. I noticed a coon got hit on the the road at the end of my driveway, on my way to work this morning. I found another adult male in a box trap just now. I didn’t even see any bait left in it when I checked it yesterday. I am now out of marshmallows, bread, and peanut butter, so I just baited the other two box traps with a little cat food, poured thru the bottom of the grate. The coons make a mess of the box-traps, so I had to take the full one back to the shop for cleanup. Two of those, that I caught earlier, had been exhumed by coyotes. As usual, those are doing a fine job of keeping the area cleared of live female and juvenile coons. To top it off, there was a dead mouse in a trap in my woodshop.
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We are hitting the freezer hard, trying to make room for an early September gun-season doe or two. Spaghetti squash with meat sauce was awesome. I had to go back for seconds. It’s way less filling than regular spaghetti. I took a little of the green bean casserole, as a side on the second trip. That was pretty good also.
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I am super careful with mine, after that misfortune (2) years ago. Unless I am in one of my very well concealed blinds, I only bring it out when I am damn sure there is no deer in close. The 3 ft high, weathered-barnwood walls that I have around most of my blinds, are great for smart phone usage though. Even a sharp-eyed hen turkey, 10 yards away, had no clue when I was texting away in there this spring.
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Beware of your number one. Mine cost me a monster Adirondack buck, 2 opening day of gun season’s ago. While you are hunting, the best place for that smart phone to be is in your pocket.
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The Imperial Whitetail tall tine tube tubers are starting to pop pretty good from the morning dew and the few brief showers we have had over the last couple weeks. I sure hope we get the rain they are calling for early next week though, so I can start cutting some old clover plots. I have seen droughts a lot worse than we are in right now. My little pond is still holding some water (it dried up completely about 5 years ago), and even the creek bed still has a little water in it.
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Not personally while hunting, but JC has steered close to a hundred my way, over the last 40 years. He sent one to me already on New Year’s day of this year, during my new favorite time to hunt deer, the Holiday ML season: Beats the hell out of tag soup.
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I don’t go to quite that extreme with them, but I do write the purchase date on the boxes, and use the oldest ones first. The SST’s also grouped better than any other slugs that I tried in my Marlin 512. I always carry some off/brand “finishers” in case a point blank finishing shot is needed, but it seldom is.
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That can be good or bad, depending on where they hit. I put a couple thru a buck’s chops, mid way back, a few years ago (due to a busted scope) and I was very surprised at how little meat was destroyed. Tracking is definitely tougher on center-lung hits, because the expansion is negligible and the exit hole is small. A plain old, full-diameter foster slug leaves much better blood trails on hits like that. I usually try to aim for the shoulder blade with the 12 ga SST’s. They are DRT every time, if I hit it. The meat damage on those shoulder blade hits, with that 12 ga SST, is no where near as bad as when a .243 hits there.
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I ran over to Runnings this morning and picked up shooting sticks. They still don’t have any 12 ga Hornady SST slugs, nor does Lockport Walmart. Those have always grouped ok out of my rifled Marlin 512, except for the last time, on the range in adverse conditions (real hot, lots of mosquitoes). I have less than 20 left. Hopefully, I can get that gun hitting right where I want it, using less than half of those. I would like to try a few from the shooting sticks, at a 150 yard range. That is about double the range, where I am comfortable with my smoothbore Ithaca 16 gauge. I have plenty of ammo for that one. I plan on simultaneous squirrel hunting, during many deer and turkey hunts this year (especially the September antlerless ones). I will bring along my open-sighted pellet gun for that, and limit shots to under 15 yards, when there is no deer around. I got that Marksman dialed in with (6) .177 pellets this morning, off the back porch. Hopefully, I will need less SST’s than that, to dial in the Marlin 12 ga deer gun, back on the range. If not, I will be using the Ithaca 16 ga, and keeping shots well under 100 yards. I guess I could break out my in-line T/C Omega ML, if the September does won’t get in close enough for the Ithaca 16 shotgun. I also have plenty of bullets, powder, and primers for that. It was right in the mark on a deer I used it on last year and one on New Year’s Day this year (as was the Marlin 12 and the Ithaca 16 on the other (2) last year). It’s a little more of a pain to clean that ML though, and I am not crazy about the one shot limitation. I will throw it in the Durango, and confirm the 100 yard zero, on my next trip back to the range. I have no intention on going for a double on deer in September anyhow, because I only have room for one in my deer fridge.