Shamanic Guide — Approaching a downed deer
I recently saw some controversy on one of the forums regarding how to approach a deer, once it’s down. Some found the idea of poking a deer in the eye to be abhorent. Some felt it was wrong to use your rifle muzzle. Count me among the eye pokers. I took my kid to Hunter Ed a few years ago, and they taught eye poking too. However, we’re getting way ahead of things here. How do you approach a deer that is down? Carefully and respectfully. As soon as a deer is shot, and you loose sight of it, check … More . . .
The 44 Dream Meets Reality
Well, I haven’t been having any more epiphanies lately. In fact, my mind has been largely elsewhere. However, I did give some thought to the Dream Cartridge. Here are some responses to your responses and some new stuff to stir the pot. Thank you, Adobe, for recognizing two things: 1) It’s not necessarily that I’m a bad shot or that #2 Son is a bad shot. As I wrote earlier: individual results may vary. Some of these shots I’ve taken have been inside 10 yards and the results have blown out a 4” hole on the other side and shredded … More . . .
More on the 44 Dream
Thanks for all your input. I posted this on a few places, and got surprisingly similar replies. Allow me to address a few issues: 1) No, I don’t need my medication changed. Thanks for asking, but Doc says I’m doing fine on the dosage I’m on. The good news is this: as a practicing shaman, I can file for unemployment benefits if I ever stop dreaming. 2) As they say, “Individual results may vary.” I can’t say why my family seems to be having such a problem with the 30-30. Really, that’s what this is all about. If my deer … More . . .
Haunted by a Cartridge
It’s 30F. Light is just coming up so I can see the far barns. They keep blowing in and out of view as the snow squalls are beginning to build. It’s the last day of late Kentucky Muzzleloader Season. I still have a tag, but the freezer is quite full, and I haven’t seen a buck worth taking in two months. Still, I wanted to come out and enjoy things as best I could. The laptop and I are out in back, somewhat sheltered. I ran a 50 foot cable out so I’d have Internet. Most guys don’t talk about … More . . .
Muldar’s Neuroma and the FRS Radio
1999. I went out opening day of bow season and on the way back to the car had something go wrong with my foot and had to crawl back to the car. Doc said I had a Muldar’s Neuroma and that surgery was the only thing that would take care of it. This is where a nerve gets pinched between two toes, and the only recourse is lots of steroid injections (which didn’t work) or removal. I was nursing the foot throughout October, trying to stay working until Thanksgiving– figured I’d take off the whole week and then come back … More . . .
Deer Season– in Retrospect
I quote myself from my weblog: Wednesday, October 06, 2004 Deer Season It all seems to come on so quickly. There is a first whiff of Fall, the Harvest Moon rises, and then ZAP! I’m in the middle of deer season and my life is filled with last-minute shopping, running loads of hunting clothes through the washer, juggling acts in the dimensions of time, space and the vagaries of stand choice. Before two months are out, it will all be over. The freezers will be filled, the checking account drained. The unmarked van of reality will pull up and dump … More . . .
Sabots in a Round-Ball Muzzleloader
CKYhunter was looking for some help over on KentuckyHunting.net regarding sabots in a round-ball muzzleloader. Here was my $.02: ACEOKY and SALTY are giving you good info. I have a .54 TC Hawken that I shot with patched roundball for 20 years. When I hunted deer, I’d switch to 425 grain Buffalo Bullets. They were good to about 40 yards, keeping them on a pie plate, but not much better. Last year I bought a drop-in 1-28 barrel from Green Mountain– still .54 caliber, but with a much faster twist for conicals and sabots. I tried 8 different bullets. I … More . . .
What I do to kill time
There was a discussion raging over at kentuckyhunters.net over what was legit when it came to killing time on the stand. Some guys read, some guys putzed with the GPS. One guy plays games on his cell phone. I read when I’m expecting a long wait on the stand. I read about a page and then put the book down and scan the woods. Reading can keep you very still. It’s especially helpful for energetic kids. It gives them something to do besides fidget. I’m currently going through Teddy Roosevelt’s memoir of hunting in the badlands. Normally I’d have dusted … More . . .
Madness
Birdog428 on Hunting Chat.Net posts: Post subject: 2004 Season Discouraging And so I add another year to the 7 previous in which I have failed to kill a buck. With less than a week left to take a deer on home ground I find myself discouraged and wanting to bag it for the season. I had more free time to hunt this year than in the past 20 but it seems to have been of little help. No snow, and very little sign made for a difficult time in the local deer woods. I counted a grand total of 5 … More . . .
Hey! I resemble that remark!
sassafrastea over at KentuckyHunting.net writes as follows: ——————————————————————————– The last two nights, JUST before dark (around 5:45), I have heard rifle shots close to home. Both times there were 3 shots fired in close succession, three shots in less than half a minute. Also heard the same gunfire opening day (Sat morning at the crack of dawn). The other days (between opening day and the night before last) I had the windows closed, so didn’t hear anything. I am not a hunter but we have friends who hunt the farm, and they were out here yesterday afternoon hunting. I went … More . . .
What should I expect
A buddy of mine wanted to know what to expect if he shows up at deer camp, here at Genesis 9:2-4. He wanted to know terrain, choice of rifle and load, and weather. Here is what I told him: SW Bracken County, KY is a land of ridges and hollows. The elevation usually only differs less than 100 feet from ridgetop to creek bottom. It has all been cleared at least once. Tobacco and cattle once ruled. Tobacco is leaving and there are fewer and fewer cattle. Some folks are turning to sheep and goats. My ridge is about 40 … More . . .
Mooseboy Gets his Cherry Popped
#2 Son, AKA Mooseboy, succeeded in bagging his first deer on Opening Day. I t was a bit of a mixed victory, but then again, aren’t they all. We got up into the stand near the campground a bit late, but still well before sunrise. A screech owl, the wail of the banshee, caught us as we were starting up the ladder; I’ve been hearing it all my life, and it still makes my skin crawl. From the look on #2’s face, it was the perfect spook to get the juice flowing. We settled in and began the wait. … More . . .
Game Cart
My folks called up today to wish me well on the hunt. I wish I could get Dad out for a try, but he says his deer hunting days are over. The were paging through the BassPro flyer and found a game cart on sale, and wanted to know if I’d be interested in having it as a Christmas present—early like. Gosh, they’re nice people. Game Cart I’d bought an old tow-behind garden spreader that I was going to scavenge to make a game cart. But that was two years ago, and it’s still sitting in the barn. This looks … More . . .
Views: 13