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in reply to: WE WISH YOU A MERRY……. #38073
Merry Christmas to all. We are now just getting the start of a white Christmas here. Hope Santa was good to everyone and enjoy the new year.
in reply to: This may be a dumb question but.. #49685On my current longbow, I have none. If you do a search for heterodyning on here it will help you find the correct placement for these silencers.
in reply to: My beautiful NY buck #59044Nice buck Alex, it looks like fall is going along nicely for you there in NY.
in reply to: filled buck tag #25032Congrats, awesome buck
in reply to: Elk Hearts movie #39783Honestly I had contributed to the movie and kind of forgotten about it until we would get the periodic updates. So unless speed has changed with the filmmaker I would not expect it to hit mass market anytime soon.
congrats on the first. enjoy the memory for the rest of your life.
in reply to: Checking back in #49699Welcome back and look forward to hearing about the new projects. my hunting time has been a bit limited due to family so I can understand and congrats on the new little one.
in reply to: Colorado '15 #49697Cool trip report Alex, enjoying the visuals. Glad to hear about the movie.
in reply to: Grilling Game Meat #14353I love to either grill or slow smoke my wild game. For the animals that have tougher meat like goose or wild turkey I usually brine fr about 48 hours in buttermilk. It seems to help with gaminess of them. I agree with John in using tongs to flip and check with finger on face. I also like to remove from the heat source an wrap in foil and let the meat rest for about 5-10 minutes before I dive in and it is so wonderful. If cooking over an open campfire grab your potato with the skin on and throw in the coals for about 45 minutes and then venison and potatoes is awesome.
in reply to: Happy belated fathers day #14344Mom and baby are doing well. Older daughter is already when the new baby can start shooting her own bow and arrow.
in reply to: Ground Game #12997In my experience some animals like antelope are so curious and cautious that a new thing like a blind can make them not come into where you want to some unless you leave it out for a couple of weeks before you use it. Others like turkeys will still come in to a new blind with the right decoy. So it depends on the animal you are hunting if they will tolerate or not a commercial ground blind. For warmth I do not have a problem with that since I am my own heat generator. However i have friends who when turkey hunting will take into a commercial blind a little stove and a pot to make coffee and does not impact there hunting. I don’t know about Dec/Jan though.
in reply to: 2015 mast and fruit crop outlook #56846We have had a lot of rain in most of the state of Colorado, his has translated to snow for the higher elevations where they are significantly above average. This has changed some of the migration patterns for elk nearby. While we are are nice and green the tomato plants in the ground are starting to turn yellow on the leaves from to much moisture.
in reply to: Our Arizona Javi Hunt #19107congrats Etter on the little one. My second is due in June and she is going to throw a wrench in the elk hunting for sure.
in reply to: New Broadhead #15731paleoman wrote: Stoners are only legal in Co. I heard…
Nah they are also trying to puff away in WA state but I hear the experiment is going up in smoke.:lol:
The head looks weird with the screw in part, you could always put these on the woodgrain carbons and now say totally modern trad.
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