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Wow. You better get some rounds through the gun just to get your shoulder ready.
I’m not sure what 1,000 rounds would feel like at the end of a day. Enjoy that man. That sounds awesome. |
Sounds like a blast DJ! Enjoy!
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I've done more bow hunting in my 40s (like, 9 months) than I did shotgun hunting in my 30s. It just fell apart. But yeah, we've been working on quail stands up at the ranch the last couple years (pain in the ass to mow around) so I may have to get my gun on this spring if Jim decides he has enough of them for us to throw some lead at them. |
So I just got the link:
https://mgwoutfitters.com/?gclid=Cjw...hoCeqcQAvD_BwE We're gonna be at La Volanta. Criminy that looks incredible. Pretty damn stoked. <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/OjeyLqhfCjo" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
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Buddy came out and had to walk a bunch of stripped wheat stubble because I didn’t have any weeds and planted a bunch of cornstalks back. Blue rock man. Just do it. Dad put like a 5 foot handle on your basic hand held thrower which can get some speed on it if you need to work on that part. But I’d just go get a basic thrower and get some lead out. 1000 rounds is A LOT |
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If in right place food and drinks top drawer Take plenty of credit/cash cause the shells are high dollar Cash for tips....tip drivers, the kids who retrieve the birds, the cooks, just plan to tip. |
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Better hit a euro pheasant hunt to get that shoulder ready!
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Go jump shoot a flock of snow geese.
Then spend an hour running around shooting cripples. That'll have your shoulder and stamina ready to go |
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I’ve been following a thread on Kansas specific quail and pheasant hunting, and it has been rather enlightening. I’m sure not that everything contained with in the discussion can be completely trusted but (I’m sure Buehler and a few others might have differing thoughts on some the farming criticisms) but, it is quite obvious that there is more than one issue lending to the decrease in the bird population here. For anyone that might be interested or is just plain off-season bored - https://forum.ultimatepheasanthuntin...-change.24921/ |
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not a hunter-but respect it.
https://bringmethenews.com/.image/c_...9136512_n.webp A nature enthusiast caught a rare glimpse of what appears to be an albino deer near Lake Mille Lacs. Lora Elfmann snapped the photo of the ghostly deer among a pack of white-tails in a field between the towns Isle and Wahkon, which are located on the southeast side of Mille Lacs in east-central Minnesota. "I drive around or hike almost daily looking for pic opportunities," Elfmann wrote in a message to Bring Me The News. "I've only seen the albino twice. Same one in the same field. But I know there's at least one other one." Barbara Keller, the big game program leader of the fish and wildlife division with the DNR, says biologists estimate albino deer occur only once in every 20,000 or 30,000 deer. As magnificent the sight of an albino deer is, the genetic disorder that causes a lack of pigment makes them an easy target for predators. Albino deer are also known to suffer from other genetic defects. "They generally experience greater mortality than typical deer due to their diminished ability to evade predators when the snow melts, and can also be associated with other genetic defects including vision and spinal problems," said Keller. The white deer running alongside a white-tail near Mille Lacs Lake earlier this month. The white deer running alongside a white-tail near Mille Lacs Lake earlier this month. Credit: Lora Elfmann White deer that are not 100% white are known as a leucistic (also called piebald) deer. Leucism causes varying levels of white on a deer's body, which is why some are half brown, half white or sometimes only have white splotches on their bodies. Elfmann's photos show a couple of tan splotches on the deer's hind legs, but Keller and a second could be urine stains rather than an indicator of leucism. "That spot on it’s back leg is where the tarsal gland is located, and that is an area deer typically urinate and stain. So I think that area might just be stained, not an actual area of dark fur," said Keller, whose opinion was confirmed by the DNR's ungulate research scientist. There are no laws protecting albino deer from hunters in Minnesota. |
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