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in reply to: 2014 Hunting #39322
I can relate to that dilemma! When I started shooting a traditional bow 10 years ago, I used alu arrows, but quickly switched to wood, and for a few years, nothing but wood. After trying shafts from different sources, I discovered tapered compressed cedar shafts made by a guy in Montrose, CO. Man, did they fly good!!!! Then I bought my first carbons, Beman classics, which I still shoot today. I was shooting both compressed woodies and carbons with equal precision at any distance. Then my compressed shafts guy disappeared, and I couldn’t get any wood arrows that flew as good as my previous ones, so I ended up shooting carbons only!
Having said that, I do miss the whole process of making my wood arrows, and I will NEVER let any aluminum or carbon touch my beautiful Osage self bow!!!! 😀 I have Hex shafts waiting backstage for a chance to touch it! Maybe towards the end of the season, after my freezer gets hopefully full, I will take the self bow out hunting! Good luck! 😀
in reply to: 7 year spike #36451Great pics, Clay! Thanks for sharing!
in reply to: Elkheart radio interview #35771I listened to it and of course enjoyed it so much!
in reply to: Grizzly b'heads giveaway #34545Ok Edsvolling!!!!!!
in reply to: Assumptions and Biases #34542I still have my compound device in my storage space buried between skis and keyboards. I tried to sell it on ebay but never had any luck, so I kept it. No big deal to me!
All my hunting buddies in the Hudson Valley are compound shooters. I’m the only trad guy. I got one of them to try a recurve one season. He did the best he could, but went back to his old Hoyt from the 80’s! :D:D
in reply to: Grizzly b'heads giveaway #34451Okay so I will give them away to the neediest of us! 😀
in reply to: Rub-a-dub-dub #34413Aaaargh!!:shock::shock:
in reply to: Moose thoughts #34168Smithhammer wrote: To form any sort of reaction based on the typically shoddy reporting of a local news channel looking to amplify a story into ‘controversy’ would be foolish.
For starters:
1) Was there intent on the part of the hunter to deliberately take the moose in front of witnesses out of a desire for provocation? Nothing in the report indicates this. So instead, a few people happened to witness a legal hunt, while they were on mixed-use public lands. It’s just as possible that some other people witnessed it, and thought nothing of it and were not outraged at all, but since they didn’t serve the angle for the story (“a backlash!”), they weren’t interviewed. The reporter said there were “several witnesses.” Yet we only hear from the two campground hosts. How do we know what anyone besides these two, who seem to want to believe that they live in a “nature zoo,” thought of the event?
A news report is very rarely the whole story, but instead select tidbits to support a pre-determined script. Always a good thing to keep in mind when watching so-called reporting like this.
2) One of the witnesses repeatedly asserts that this was a “trophy hunt,” and suggests that the hunter wasn’t keeping the meat. Does she somehow know this for a fact? Did she learn this from talking to the hunter? Or, is she just making an assumption, and if so, based on what, exactly? Colorado, like many states, has laws against failing to “reasonably dress, care for and prepare wild meat for human consumption. At a minimum, the four quarters, tenderloins and backstraps are edible meat.” This was clearly a legal hunt, and the hunter “did everything by the book.” So we have to assume he kept the meat, and that this was not solely a “trophy hunt.” In other words, the witness is spewing a baseless opinion, which the “news” channel dutifully repeats with no further investigation as to its veracity (which would show that she is wrong) because again – it’s a useful inflammatory statement that helps serve the angle for the story.
I’ll say it again – reacting solely to the paltry information in this poorly investigated little news clip would be a mistake.
Nuff said!!
in reply to: Binos in Forested Areas #32890donthomas wrote: I use them constantly, and find them essential at close range in dense foliage. They’re what allow me to pick a deer’s antler tine out of the brush. Unfair advantage? When you’re still hunting wary game with a traditional bow, I think you’ve conceded enough advantages already. Don
true!
in reply to: What ya got goin? #32262Thanks Mike! See you soon!
in reply to: What ya got goin? #32211I just fletched new arrows. I’m going Orange this year, in honor of T.J Conrads, who introduced and addicted me to traditional archery 10 years ago through his great Handbook! I I’ve been fletching White and Traditional Barred White since started making arrows, but I thought a change was in order for this 10 year Anniversary!
in reply to: Binos in Forested Areas #32201Smithhammer wrote: [quote=alexbugnon]I don’t use them. It’s just more crap to carry, and I always felt that it’s an unfair advantage. Just like the slogan says “use the quads God gave you”, I just want to use the eyes God gave me! Slightly rigid thinking, I know! 🙄
Well heck, Alex – by that line of thinking, clothes and shoes probably give one an unfair advantage too!
I was about to cross an open hillside the other morning, in dim pre-dawn light. Before exposing myself as I traversed it, I took a good, long look across the hillside, and couldn’t see anything. Listened for a while, and couldn’t hear anything. And then I figured I’d better glass the hillside thoroughly before proceeding, and bingo – there were half a dozen bulls slowly making their way ahead of me that I couldn’t pick out at all with my naked eye in that light.
A half hour later, I was within 25ft. of two of those bulls as they fed, but that’s another story…
Nice!!! OOOH I wish I was up there right now!! Last year, I was extracting myself from my sleeping bag in 23 degrees temperature and a few inches of snow, so naked and no shoes is definitely out! :D:D:D
in reply to: Thought I would Share….My first Longbow Elk #27880Congratulations!! :D:D:D
in reply to: Campfire Cooking #27315Mountain House bag!……… On my Biolite camp stove! It uses twigs for fuel, aaand you can charge your phone! kinda of yuppie-ish, I know!:D
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