THR  

Go Back   THR > Venues > Hunting

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old November 16, 2009, 03:59 PM   #76
RockinU
Member
 
 
Join Date: November 9, 2009
Location: Brazos County Texas
Posts: 18
Quote:
Hunting: The activity of looking thoroughly in order to find something.
Sitting in a tree over a bucket of corn doesn't meet that criteria.

Then I am assuming that hunting agriculture (like alfalfa) or food plots, or the travelways to the food source doesn't meet your criteria either?
__________________
Faster horses, younger women, older whiskey, and more money
RockinU is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 04:06 PM   #77
Dr. Tad Hussein Winslow
Member
 
 
Join Date: November 14, 2007
Posts: 11,983
Quote:
True. I've personally (via tractor) ground up entire families of soft, cute, little cuddly bunnies, all the while trying to prepare the ground to grow some food for vegans!!
Pretty ironic, huh?

Yeah, wyohome, you'd better go out of your way to NOT hunt any animals that are on their way to feeding grounds, in order to conform with your own ethics. Maybe you should stop the game and ask them, and then if they say, "no, not going to eat right now; just wandering around", then you say "Ok" and shoot them.
Dr. Tad Hussein Winslow is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 04:26 PM   #78
qajaq59
Member
 
 
Join Date: December 7, 2005
Location: S. C. Florida
Posts: 1,530
Quote:
True. I've personally (via tractor) ground up entire families of soft, cute, little cuddly bunnies, all the while trying to prepare the ground to grow some food for vegans!!
Oh I know just the vegan to tell that to the next time I see her.
__________________
Qajaq59

One slow hit is better then 500 quick misses. "It ain't the noise that kills 'em!!!!"
qajaq59 is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 05:21 PM   #79
Leaky Waders
Member
 
 
Join Date: April 14, 2003
Location: Southwest Asia again
Posts: 337
#12 Shot beaver float!
#13 Shot beaver sink!

Leaky Waders is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 05:26 PM   #80
jimmyraythomason
Member
 
 
Join Date: December 19, 2006
Location: Alabama
Posts: 2,324
Good one, Leaky Waders! lol.
__________________
NRA and NAHC life member.
jimmyraythomason is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 05:43 PM   #81
dragonriot
Member
 
 
Join Date: September 20, 2007
Location: West Allis, WI
Posts: 17
haha!! =)
dragonriot is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 05:55 PM   #82
jimmyraythomason
Member
 
 
Join Date: December 19, 2006
Location: Alabama
Posts: 2,324
#whatever, "It's okay to crawl under that bush(or rocky ledge) for a hunting blind, the snakes aren't out in January(in Alabama)." Or,more simply,"There aren't any snakes out during hunting season".
__________________
NRA and NAHC life member.

Last edited by jimmyraythomason; November 16, 2009 at 06:02 PM.
jimmyraythomason is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 06:02 PM   #83
MCgunner
Member
 
 
Join Date: December 3, 2005
Location: Texas Coastal Bend
Posts: 13,701
Quote:
Oh I know just the vegan to tell that to the next time I see her.
Logic and common sense rarely work on such people. You might suggest her getting into edible wild plants, though. She IS killing 'em to eat 'em, though. A TRUE lover of life would only eat the fruit/seed, not greens or roots. And, they'd pick or harvest the crop without destruction of the crop. How they'd plant the crop, not sure. Maybe go through the field shooing all the rabbits away?

But, in reality, planting crops is destroying species diversity (not desirable). Hunting is controlling wild populations (desirable). So, we quit planting and live off the land and let the city folks starve, eh?

There's always more to a story than meets the eye. Too many folks just look for simple answers. RECYCLE and SAVE THE WHALES!
__________________
http://www.medinafortexas.com/
MCgunner is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 06:24 PM   #84
qajaq59
Member
 
 
Join Date: December 7, 2005
Location: S. C. Florida
Posts: 1,530
Beavers that eat mahogany sink?

Beavers that eat balsa wood float?

Maybe??????
__________________
Qajaq59

One slow hit is better then 500 quick misses. "It ain't the noise that kills 'em!!!!"
qajaq59 is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 06:26 PM   #85
schlockinz
Member
 
 
Join Date: May 24, 2009
Location: Arkansas River or Green River
Posts: 219
I'd say big white tails can be just as dumb as anything.

I saw a 180 class deer just sitting in a field, easily within range, watched me for at least 5 minutes, while I loading my gun to go look for pigs.
schlockinz is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 06:42 PM   #86
krochus
Member
 
 
Join Date: October 14, 2005
Location: Northwest Arkansas
Posts: 5,348
Quote:
Originally Posted by schlockinz View Post
I'd say big white tails can be just as dumb as anything.

I saw a 180 class deer just sitting in a field, easily within range, watched me for at least 5 minutes, while I loading my gun to go look for pigs.
LOL the deer I just killed was even funnier. I was STROLLING down a creek bed on a drive toward the wife and this buck just for the lack of a better word MOSEYS out in front of me out of the overgrowth head down intent on crossing the creek not 30 yds away. We just kinda literally bumbled into one another with much the same reaction as two folks meeting at a hallway corner........only I had a GUN
__________________
Have you taken an AR15 hunting recently? Please think of the poor unfortunate EBR's will you?
.223 rem Buck
7.62x39mm Doe
krochus is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 06:46 PM   #87
Dr. Tad Hussein Winslow
Member
 
 
Join Date: November 14, 2007
Posts: 11,983
Quote:
Beavers that eat mahogany sink?

Beavers that eat balsa wood float?

Maybe??????
Nice....
Dr. Tad Hussein Winslow is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 06:58 PM   #88
krochus
Member
 
 
Join Date: October 14, 2005
Location: Northwest Arkansas
Posts: 5,348
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr. Tad Hussein Winslow View Post
Nice....
and if they float they're witches right?
krochus is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 07:23 PM   #89
schlockinz
Member
 
 
Join Date: May 24, 2009
Location: Arkansas River or Green River
Posts: 219
I got a deer in a strange way last season. I had been hunting a fairly large 10pt all season, and was headed down to a bean field to try and find him. On the way down I see two does bedded down, I'm still driving on a lease road and decide that I'll pass them. About this time, the buck with them, that I hadn't seen, gets up, walks 50yds away from me (so, towards me), stops in the two tracks and proceeds to start pawing the ground and and staring me down. At this point I can see that he's mature and a wide spread with good mass, no idea about any points though. I get out of the car, get my gun out of my metal case, put on all my blaze orange, kill the truck, sit there for a while, and decide that its been over 2 minutes, this has got to be legal, shot him in the heart, and he proceeds to paw up the ground furiously. I take another shoot, thinking that I had missed him, and screwed the pooch here. I'd used my door as a rest, and at this point he was slowly trotting, I hit the mirror as I pulled the trigger which put my shot a little further back, the deer kept moving at the same speed. I found him dead 8yds later, just far enough to be out of sight when he went down. At that point I decided that even old white tails can be stupid.

As for mulies being hard, shooting a big mature muley seems hard to me, only time I've seen one within shooting range was on a pheasant hunt. He knelt in the grass, somehow concealed his horns, and our line of guys was no more than 10yds apart, and he slipped through the middle, and exploded out of there after he was about 10yds behind us. Scared some of the guys pretty good, but he looked like he would have been at least a 180" deer.
schlockinz is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 07:23 PM   #90
jimmyraythomason
Member
 
 
Join Date: December 19, 2006
Location: Alabama
Posts: 2,324
and if they drown,they are...er,WERE mortal.
__________________
NRA and NAHC life member.
jimmyraythomason is offline  
Old November 16, 2009, 07:27 PM   #91
John Parker
Member
 
 
Join Date: May 14, 2009
Posts: 415
Quote:
True. I've personally (via tractor) ground up entire families of soft, cute, little cuddly bunnies, all the while trying to prepare the ground to grow some food for vegans!!
I'm so glad I had that shirt made that says "Wheat is MURDER!"
John Parker is offline  
Old Today, 04:22 AM   #92
bromdenlong
Member
 
 
Join Date: March 2, 2006
Posts: 66
"Wheat is Murder". Classic. Now I want the shirt, with a picture of a sadistically grinning farmer grinding up bunnies with a combine. The combine should have "Go Vegan" and "Meat is Murder" slogans on the side of it.
__________________
Or is my life better spent as the silent, alert, stalwart, invisible guardian of the free mall…

I cannot tell.
bromdenlong is offline  
Old Today, 05:03 AM   #93
scythefwd
Member
 
 
Join Date: March 13, 2008
Location: Ladysmith, VA
Posts: 1,142
John Parker - You might find something like that from a Celiac website (celiacs cannot eat wheat, it really is damaging to them). Wifey has a "seperate the wheat from the chef" apron.

uhh.... deer can smell fear? - to keep it related to topic
scythefwd is online now  
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:38 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.