Message from @Mojave Paisan - NV
Discord ID: 520840681342763008
I love elk hunting with full bars of LTE. 😀
I already posted this in farming but I thought you rangers might like it too.
Nice buck.
My cousin got him.
With his legs up behind his head like that it looks like he's just chillin.
So relaxed
Constantinople not Istanbul
Looks like dinner was running late.
Always remember boys nature is dangerous. This is my dad's dog. He's fine btw.
porcupined! poor doggo
You might not be surprised to hear that this isn't the first time he's picked a bad fight. He's been skunked twice. He's a monster hunting dog though. When he was younger he used to catch pheasants by himself.
Diverse and vibrant Asian ticks
3rd world diseases are part of their culture bigot
I may have revealed my power level in my last paper of my last class.
"As usual, the human element is most tricky. As the postmodern, banal, suburban sprawl consumes all that was once good in this world, animals find themselves struggling to exist in our drywall matrix. In arid or sparse environments, animal interactions can become more drastic and desperate. It is important that municipalities, counties, and relevant state and federal authorities adequately educate and regulate people into their own best practices, such as garbage storage in bear country, or not hiking alone in the land of cougars and ravenous pit bulls. Unfortunately the pretense of democracy requires every interest (no matter how sullied) to be considered. This may be done in onerous public hearings or instead labyrinthine bureaucratic lawyer fights. At the end of the day, the wildlife habitat manager can only hope that the least amount of damage to all living creatures is done, and the least amount of ground is lost to the eternal Wal-Mart."
Buzzwords of pretend intellectualism, activate!
But is your professor based?
They are an avid duck hunter and have apprehended Chinese-paid poachers. Who knows?
That's as edgy as it got, the rest was a dry rundown on Leopold-style habitat management.
My program does have some confirmed based profs though.
One said "portland should be fenced off for a year"
I'm going kangaroo spot lighting tonight. I'll try to get some pictures for you guys.
Please do! I’m very jealous of you this past week or so lol
We got 3 roos and 3 wombats.
The kangaroos we got were pretty small. There was a bit of a thunderstorm in the distance and we think that might have driven some of them away from the property we were hunting. My GF's brother said that on a good night they might get as many as 10.
We saw one big red buck but he got down into a creek bed and we couldn't get him back out.
@Der Seeteufel - SD I've eaten roo before but how's that wombat taste?
@RevStench they use the meat for dogs or leave them for the foxes.
Oh ok, seems like a waste.haha I guess the dogs have to eat too.
That’s what I’m talking about
Small enough to be wallabies unless they’re actually young roos
@VinceChaos they were a breed of smaller kangaroos. The one that is pictured is a female scrubber that I shot. My GFs brother shot the other two roos and they were blues and both about that size. Reds are the ones that get to be as tall as a man. I shot all three wombats we got but I'm not sure if I should post all the pictures I got. Some are pretty graphic. We go for headshots and .223 pretty much demolishes them.
Ugly bastards.
Nice my knowledge is a little rusty. The reds are my favorite animal. What a treat
GFs brother shot a big boomer today. You can see how much bigger he is than the other 3 we had in the cold storage from before.
what kind of fire starting kit would someone have used in the 19th century? I'm reading a book about the Yukon and it sounded like they were able to start a fire anywhere, possibly with green wood even.
One trick I learned in the boy scouts was to use branches near the bottom of an evergreen tree. They would stay dry in rain or snow and in the case of deep snow, the base of the tree would make a great shelter. You could also use the sap as a firestarter.