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wolc123

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Everything posted by wolc123

  1. I think it great that folks have the work from home option. It’s not for me, but it cuts down on the rush hour traffic, which is a great benefit to me.
  2. It looks like my 2 acre rr corn plot out back made a little better than “knee high by the 4th of July”. After almost (2) weeks without rain, we finally got a decent shot of that today. That probably added 6” to the height of this corn, and helped out my 1/2 acre sweetcorn planting. The 2 oz per gallon of gly that I sprayed on the rows of rr corn while cultivating on June 25 gave me a very good kill on the weeds. It looks like the deer trimmed off a lot of the last couple rows of late silver queen corn that I put in a couple weeks ago. My earliest planting of 72 day cappuccino sweetcorn looks like it is still a few weeks away from making ears. I will start trapping that for coons as soon as it does. If I can keep most of them eradicated from the area, that 2 acres of rr corn out back just might make it all the way thru the Holiday ML season this year. It sounds like NY has already approved that again and I should be able to hunt every day if it this year. Another nice thing about today’s rain, is that it kept down the dust, so I was able to cut the lawn for the first time in a couple weeks, and work up the adjacent wheat/clover plots, without creating a big dust storm that makes it hard to breath and plugs the tractors air filters.
  3. Not sure it was him, but I hope it was. JC always has the final say.
  4. Since you brought it up Paula, here is a picture of “forky”. He may very likely be the mean little buck that gave his life , so that my buddy could drive a virtually “free” car. Sorry I couldn’t get a better picture. Glad to hear that the op is finally getting his truck back. Sometimes, these stories have happier endings. Bottom line is, it always works out, just as The Man Upstairs (JC) intends it to.
  5. I like ours (15 ft diameter x 4 ft deep). It’s big enough for an adult or two enough to swim in and small enough to easily put up and take down each year. My wife paid $ 200 for the package, that included a filter pump, about (5) years ago. I’d say we got our money’s worth. I use it almost every day, when the temp is above 80. Maintenance is easy, put a chlorine tablet in the float, and change the filter element every couple weeks. It is small enough that regular usage eliminates the need to vacuum. I extended our back house deck, with some pt lumber scraps that I had laying around, so the kids don’t track grass clippings from the lawn into it. Open the sliding door from the house, walk across the deck, and dive in. I wouldn’t want a bigger one. We had an 18 footer when I was a kid and that was a pain to maintain. It needed regular vacuuming and was too big to take down and put up every year. It had a separate raised deck and grass clippings were an issue. The toughest part of the setup, for our little 15 footer, was grading a level spot next to the house so that I didn’t need a separate deck. I only had to do that the first year. When our kids were younger, we had a 15 ft trampoline that we kept in the pools place (with easy deck access), for the other (8) months of the year.
  6. My wife and I had a decent Holiday weekend up at the her parents Adirondack home. The smallmouth bass were fairly cooperative. I landed (15) over 12” and (3) shorts ((5) “legal sized” each day, all released). The last one I caught this morning was the largest (18”). All but one were very healthy looking and fought well. Most of them went for a 1/8 oz brown bucktail jig, tossed to bass that were chasing minnows up onto the surface, over deep water far from shore. That’s a fun way to fish and very efficient. I used just one jig, all three days, and never retied. No fish threw the hook, even though I pinched the barb to simplify release and to increase their odds of survival. I caught (2) “keepers” and a short on a trolled silver hotntot. That usually works much better in October. I burned 2 gallons of 16:1 oil mixed gas in the 5.5 Johnson over all three days. I usually don’t keep any bass up there, until the fall, when it is easier to keep the meat fresh. NY state health advisory says women and children shouldn’t eat any bass from the Adirondacks, but ok for men over 50, same as the St Lawrence River. I keep enough bass each year for (12) vacuum packs for me, from the Adirondacks and the St Lawrence, and (12) packs for my wife and kids, from the Upper Niagara River and Lake Erie (fish from those waters are ok for women and children. That gives us all enough fish for the recommended amount of 1 meal per month from NY waters. We all like bass. I give any perch that I catch to my mother in law. It looks like the deer population is good up there, based on the distinct browse line on the Hemlocks around the lake. There has also been an increase in bear sightings this year. That, and the best of the year smallmouth bass fishing, really has me looking forward to the early October ML week this year. I might go up early, and catch a day or two of crossbow, the week prior. browse line: Notice how the branches all stop about 6 ft short of the water line. That “trimming” was not done by professional landscapers. It makes it nice for casting the shoreline with top water baits, etc. That top water action usually peaks around Labor Day. One Labor Day morning, a year or two ago, I took (5) keeper smallmouth on (7) casts with a top water bait, without leaving the dock. I almost hit that catch rate with the 1/8 oz jig, just below the surface this morning, getting (3) keepers on my first 5 casts, at the hotspot.
  7. Happy 4th. It was great morning for smallmouth bass fishing.
  8. It took just over an hour to get (5) smallmouth bass this morning, all on the same 1/8 oz bucktail jig. Just one other guy out there in a kayak. The lake was dead calm at sunrise. I made a few casts with a Zara pooch from the dock, with no hits. Then I motored over to the big underwater bar, where I had the most action the last two days. It looked like the water was boiling near the tip of that bar, as the bass were chasing minnows up to the surface. I caught (3) there on my first (5) casts. They scattered a bit after that. I was able to get two more by rowing over to where I saw something breaking the surface and casting the jig to that spot. The last one was the biggest (18”). The shortest one this morning was 14”. All but the fourth (16”) fought very good. I was thankful that the last and biggest one didn’t break off, because it really pulled. The improved cinch knot, twice thru the hook eye, is pretty strong when you are not bouncing the jig off rocks on the bottom. That’s the best part about fishing for suspended bass in mid-summer. They also fight like mad in the warm water.
  9. Yes, it was easy because it was on my jacket, which I put on as soon as I got home from work, and put a primer on my ML, with about 10 minutes of legal light remaining. It was December and quite cold out, after I opened the window and started scanning the standing corn in the field behind our house. I watched the deer stand up in the corn, and make his way to the edge, where I had turnips planted. With about 3 minutes of daylight left, I dropped him in that little turnip plot (about 100 yards out back) with my T/C Omega. i put on my boots, went back with my loader tractor and tagged and gutted him, then hung him in the garage and butchered him the following week. I thought it was a doe, but I was not too heart-broken that it turned out to be a button buck. I had a dmp tag, it was the last day, we needed meat, and that was the only deer that I saw. With just 10 minutes, I didn’t have time for a full-blown hunt, so the bedroom window was the best I could do. I had the same plot rotation again last year, and tried that once or twice, but didn’t see anything. You can’t skip any of the rules, no matter how big and fancy your blind is. I have probably killed a dozen woodchucks from that same window, and I may not have had the back tag on for all of them. I also got a coyote, a red fox, several coons, and a dozen or so crows, from that window. I pile deer, and other carcasses back there, and that pile attracts plenty of visitors. I will have a better view from that window, now that the old barn is down. No time to make fancy food plots back there this year, but I will try to set it up good next year. Maybe I can squeeze in a little turnip plot back there yet this year, and leave some of my late sweetcorn standing. I did not plant any fieldcorn in that field this year, and that is the real key to holding deer during the late ML season. This velvet 3.1 yr old buck would have been a 50 yard chip shot from that window, on June 21, when I was setting up our pool in the back yard: He was on the near bank of the creek. I pile the carcasses right behind him, on the opposite bank. The button buck stood about 50 yards behind him and a little to the right.
  10. A 5th “legal sized” bass this evening and (2) more shorts on jigs. Nothing at all trolling the plug today. (2) 16”, 15”, 17” and 14” on the jig. Not as many fish, out suspended over deep water as when they are along the shoreline earlier and later, but way less snags. I have not lost a lure in two days of fishing, unlike Memorial Day weekend when I went thru almost a dozen jigs. Good thing they are almost free.
  11. Yes I did it once from our bedroom window and I would do it again without hesitation. You still need to put on a back tag and obey all the game laws (minimum of 500 ft from building without permission etc.). Mine was a bb on the last day of late ML season, and in full accordance with all NY state game laws. Those are the best “trophy” of all, on the table and as far as my wife is concerned. It was the only time that she was able to thank me in the same spot where I made the kill. That’s what I call a win win deal.
  12. Hopefully, He’s been able to talk some sense into her, now that He has her where He wanted her. If you think anyone besides JC has the final say on any living things departure (whitetail deer and sparrows included) then you got another thing coming. Sometimes, thanking Him for his perfect timing is in order. He set me up good a few times last year also:
  13. I am thankful for His timing on moving her along there. Had He waited a few more months, Trump wouldn’t have been able to flip that seat and we’d have been stuck with R vs W for many more years.
  14. Thank you Jesus for taking RBG when you did. That timing was perfect for ending this American Hollocost.
  15. Deer seem to like winter wheat a little better than rye. I usually plant it with white clover after September 1, then mow it the following June. Deer come from miles around to dig thru the snow for that wheat. Its also high on their preference list in early spring .
  16. I trolled once around the lake and got nothing. Drifted across the area where I got the 2 early, saw one jump and caught it on a jig. Caught another 2 casts later. All (4) were within an inch of each other on size. Back to trolling again now, trying for number 5 for the day, or 10 am, whichever comes first.
  17. I caught (2) smallmouth (15”,16”) early on jigs. Lake was dead calm this morning. I rowed out to the center, where I saw minnows being chased out of the water, and made a few casts over water that was about 85 ft deep. They hit the 1/8 oz bucktail jig, soon after it touched the water, within 5 ft of the surface. A slight breeze picked up now, causing some wave action and I can’t see any more fish or minnows jumping. I am trolling with a small hotntot, to see if I can get a few more bass (maybe that elusive 22 incher) before 10:00.
  18. I can’t wait for some fresh sweetcorn. Hopefully, we got some rain at home last night, because mine really needs some.
  19. My first Adirondack buck was a 300 yardish shot, from a ridge to a creek-bottom, with my Ruger M77 30/06. That area is all overgrown now, so I probably won’t carry that heavy, long rifle up here again. I likely won’t hunt with it anymore, unless I do another western elk or Canada Moose trip, after I retire. I suppose, if 30/30 ammo becomes unavailable, I could press it into service again, for Adirondack deer and bear. I am pretty well stocked with 30/06 ammo. 1st Adirondack buck:
  20. Swallow fhem whole and wash them down with a Ruby red. MOB
  21. What ammo do you use ? My current supply (not many left) is Winchester XX, 150 gr.
  22. Looks like a turkey. What goes better with smoked turkey, Modelo Negra or DosEquis especial ?
  23. Hopefully, I will finally get a crack at a deer with my .30/30 lever this year. I am dying to see how it performs on them. I have only shot at 3 deer with a rifle (my 30/06 bolt action) and all 3 were DRT. That gun is just too big and heavy to lug around the Adirondacks where I mostly rifle hunt these days. The .30/30 levers are sweet to carry up there. My 2 home spots are shotgun only.
  24. 3 smallmouth made it into the boat so far this morning. One on jig earlier and then a couple on a silver hotntot trolling. All released. I will only keep one over 22” to mount (if I find one) on this trip. Peacefull out here with the whole 100 acre lake to myself. There was another guy out on a kayak earlier but he went back in.
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