Welcome to the AppalachianTrailCafe.net!
Take a moment and register and then join the conversation
Take a moment and register and then join the conversation
Hunting
This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse this site, you are agreeing to our Cookie Policy.
-
-
-
-
-
Are there any bow hunters out there that wear reading glasses? I tried shooting today wearing reading glasses and I believe I may try while hunting. Without the glasses the target is clear but the sight is blurred and over size, with reading glasses the site is clear and distinct but the target blurred, tried it each way and it looks like I'm better off shooting with the glasses.I may grow old but I'll never grow up.
-
-
Drybones wrote:
Are there any bow hunters out there that wear reading glasses? I tried shooting today wearing reading glasses and I believe I may try while hunting. Without the glasses the target is clear but the sight is blurred and over size, with reading glasses the site is clear and distinct but the target blurred, tried it each way and it looks like I'm better off shooting with the glasses.
-
odd man out wrote:
Drybones wrote:
Are there any bow hunters out there that wear reading glasses? I tried shooting today wearing reading glasses and I believe I may try while hunting. Without the glasses the target is clear but the sight is blurred and over size, with reading glasses the site is clear and distinct but the target blurred, tried it each way and it looks like I'm better off shooting with the glasses.
I may grow old but I'll never grow up. -
-
-
-
I just keep thinking about that line in the Johnny Hortin song about their squirrel guns....
Doesn't look any worse than quail but I'll stick with sirloin.
Resident Australian, proving being a grumpy old man is not just an American trait. -
I went to a BBQ birthday party down on the Pamunkey River and we had pork butts and muskrats on the cooker. Them muskrats looked like big rats. Just goes to show ya we eat almost anything down here in the south."Dazed and Confused"
Recycle, re-use, re-purpose
Plant a tree
Take a kid hiking
Make a difference -
jimmyjam wrote:
I went to a BBQ birthday party down on the Pamunkey River and we had pork butts and muskrats on the cooker. Them muskrats looked like big rats. Just goes to show ya we eat almost anything down here in the south.
2,000 miler -
-
-
-
max.patch wrote:
jimmyjam wrote:
I went to a BBQ birthday party down on the Pamunkey River and we had pork butts and muskrats on the cooker. Them muskrats looked like big rats. Just goes to show ya we eat almost anything down here in the south.
Neutria was claimed to be good eatin' down in Lousiana, they tear up levees, but folks caught on quick the neutria don't taste good. They have to pay folks to hunt the critters.
Gator sausage sells well there, along with some sandwich places in coastal Mississippi. Kinda expensive.--
"What do you mean its sunrise already ?!", me. -
chief wrote:
You haven't lived until you've peeled the shell from a balut. If you don't know what a balut is look it up in wikipedia they have some nice pics.
"Dazed and Confused"
Recycle, re-use, re-purpose
Plant a tree
Take a kid hiking
Make a difference -
Astro wrote:
In China they will let you pick out your own rodent, snake, fish. Sort of like we do lobster.
I may grow old but I'll never grow up. -
jimmyjam wrote:
chief wrote:
You haven't lived until you've peeled the shell from a balut. If you don't know what a balut is look it up in wikipedia they have some nice pics.
If your Doctor is a tree, you're on acid. -
chief wrote:
You haven't lived until you've peeled the shell from a balut. If you don't know what a balut is look it up in wikipedia they have some nice pics.
Sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory.
Dr. Seuss -
Drybones wrote:
Astro wrote:
In China they will let you pick out your own rodent, snake, fish. Sort of like we do lobster.
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them. -
SarcasmTheElf wrote:
Drybones wrote:
Astro wrote:
In China they will let you pick out your own rodent, snake, fish. Sort of like we do lobster.
2,000 miler -
How desperate did the first person to try an oyster have to be?I'm not lost. I know where I am. I'm right here.
-
AnotherKevin wrote:
How desperate did the first person to try an oyster have to be?
2,000 miler -
Rasty wrote:
chief wrote:
You haven't lived until you've peeled the shell from a balut. If you don't know what a balut is look it up in wikipedia they have some nice pics.
-
chief wrote:
Rasty wrote:
chief wrote:
You haven't lived until you've peeled the shell from a balut. If you don't know what a balut is look it up in wikipedia they have some nice pics.
The pig eyeball was terrible. It was gooey at first then chewing the lens was like eating thick plastic wrap.
Vietnamese meatballs were the worst. It was like eating a rubber ball flavored with star anise.Sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory.
Dr. Seuss -
-
Foresight wrote:
This fool had been terrorizing me lately....
no more terrorizing will be taking place....
-
Rasty wrote:
chief wrote:
Rasty wrote:
chief wrote:
You haven't lived until you've peeled the shell from a balut. If you don't know what a balut is look it up in wikipedia they have some nice pics.
The pig eyeball was terrible. It was gooey at first then chewing the lens was like eating thick plastic wrap.
Vietnamese meatballs were the worst. It was like eating a rubber ball flavored with star anise.
-
If your deer is anything like my dear when she's cold us cowboys will just mooooove over all by ourself.
-
I had a hunting dog follow me on my hike. He was so sweet and trotted right behind me. I didn't talk to him or encourage him and he eventually turned down a side trail. I really liked having him with me and it got me thinking about having a hiking dog.
There were a lot of hunters in the area where I was hiking. They were all friendly and would radio the other hunters that I was coming down the trail. There was one section where I hadn't seen hunters for a while. It was real quiet and breezy when all of a sudden I heard a bang. I decided a limb had fallen but started singing just in case. I went around a corner and there was a man squirrel hunting. He was really nice and it turns out his sister and BIL are section hiking the AT.
Another couple I met were out looking for their dogs. They were missing three of them and had their tracking device out. At first glance, I thought it was a mini bow and arrow...that's what it looked like :). I talked to the lady for quite a while, she was a character. All her hunting dogs were rescues and she loved all of them. Once, they spent four days looking for a missing dog. She also had 5 rescue horses and how she fed all those animals, she'll never know. She said a lot of hikers have been taking collars off the dogs. I told her I had no problems with hunting so she told me how to cook bear meat. Her man was Cherokee Indian and they were salt of the earth people.Lost in the right direction. -
TrafficJam wrote:
I had a hunting dog follow me on my hike. He was so sweet and trotted right behind me. I didn't talk to him or encourage him and he eventually turned down a side trail. I really liked having him with me and it got me thinking about having a hiking dog.
There were a lot of hunters in the area where I was hiking. They were all friendly and would radio the other hunters that I was coming down the trail. There was one section where I hadn't seen hunters for a while. It was real quiet and breezy when all of a sudden I heard a bang. I decided a limb had fallen but started singing just in case. I went around a corner and there was a man squirrel hunting. He was really nice and it turns out his sister and BIL are section hiking the AT.
Another couple I met were out looking for their dogs. They were missing three of them and had their tracking device out. At first glance, I thought it was a mini bow and arrow...that's what it looked like :). I talked to the lady for quite a while, she was a character. All her hunting dogs were rescues and she loved all of them. Once, they spent four days looking for a missing dog. She also had 5 rescue horses and how she fed all those animals, she'll never know. She said a lot of hikers have been taking collars off the dogs. I told her I had no problems with hunting so she told me how to cook bear meat. Her man was Cherokee Indian and they were salt of the earth people.
Curious....what song did you start singing, if you were in the woods around hunters please tell me it was country and not rap.I may grow old but I'll never grow up. -
Drybones wrote:
TrafficJam wrote:
I had a hunting dog follow me on my hike. He was so sweet and trotted right behind me. I didn't talk to him or encourage him and he eventually turned down a side trail. I really liked having him with me and it got me thinking about having a hiking dog.
There were a lot of hunters in the area where I was hiking. They were all friendly and would radio the other hunters that I was coming down the trail. There was one section where I hadn't seen hunters for a while. It was real quiet and breezy when all of a sudden I heard a bang. I decided a limb had fallen but started singing just in case. I went around a corner and there was a man squirrel hunting. He was really nice and it turns out his sister and BIL are section hiking the AT.
Another couple I met were out looking for their dogs. They were missing three of them and had their tracking device out. At first glance, I thought it was a mini bow and arrow...that's what it looked like :). I talked to the lady for quite a while, she was a character. All her hunting dogs were rescues and she loved all of them. Once, they spent four days looking for a missing dog. She also had 5 rescue horses and how she fed all those animals, she'll never know. She said a lot of hikers have been taking collars off the dogs. I told her I had no problems with hunting so she told me how to cook bear meat. Her man was Cherokee Indian and they were salt of the earth people.
Curious....what song did you start singing, if you were in the woods around hunters please tell me it was country and not rap.
Lost in the right direction. -
hunting season starts this weekend in earnest in georgia.
i'm thinking one of houston astros jerseys and a ballcap would be good hiking apparel.
here's dwight howard getting ready for a hike.
[IMG:http://img.bleacherreport.net/img/images/photos/003/424/965/73052ced8051e8463a7d4da1134ed98a_crop_exact.jpg?w=1500&h=1500&q=85]2,000 miler -
-
max.patch wrote:
hunting season starts this weekend in earnest in georgia.
i'm thinking one of houston astros jerseys and a ballcap would be good hiking apparel.
here's dwight howard getting ready for a hike.
[IMG:http://img.bleacherreport.net/img/images/photos/003/424/965/73052ced8051e8463a7d4da1134ed98a_crop_exact.jpg?w=1500&h=1500&q=85]
The road to glory cannot be followed with much baggage.
Richard Ewell, CSA General -
I just winced.
Some things just shouldn't happen.Resident Australian, proving being a grumpy old man is not just an American trait. -
-
Share
- Facebook 0
- Twitter 0
- Google Plus 0
- Reddit 0