- Joined
- Jul 17, 2019
- Messages
- 41
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- 601
- Vehicle Year
- 1997
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- Automatic
A friend in my back yard. He had not been close to any wild animal before.
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Went hunting at my brothers first, over an hour standing where I thought I would see a 3 point (6 point for you guys east of the rockies) with no dice... then wandered through the woods and saw a doe then another doe and a buck following it that turned out to be a small spike, had his forehead in the crosshairs for a long while deciding... then went to my normal hunting grounds with a buddy, didn't see anything for a couple hours but ended up seeing about 10 deer, had a fork in the crosshairs but he darted out half a second before I could get ready...
Oh, oddly enough that I bought the arbor press yesterday, today one of the pins on my sling swivel on my hunting rifle disappeared and it's a cheap sling that has sewn in swivels not replaceable easy so I got home mid day and installed a roll pin with the arbor press... realize now I need to take the collar off the one end so I can index the handle easier...
I'd yet to watch that particular youtube video, it's on the list of things to watch... simply leaving the collar off sounds easier though so I can put it in the tooth I want, we'll see...if you grind the bottom tooth on the ram the arm can be repositioned when the ram is lifted.
that sucks, old transformers can have some really nasty oil in them. PCBs in the pre 70s ones.I'd yet to watch that particular youtube video, it's on the list of things to watch... simply leaving the collar off sounds easier though so I can put it in the tooth I want, we'll see...
I know the weights I've heard aren't rules of thumb but in general the average black tail is bigger than the average white tail, what you are saying likely brings the average down significantly... the biggest problem is black tail don't reproduce like mice like white tail do (also probably just internet myths but whatever, more cars hit white tail than black tail)... all public lands are seriously over hunted, all the jerkwads that burn cars and couches have caused the timber companies to install gates and close things off. The dumb reason Warehouser gates everything is a guy around Bend undercut everyone when they were remodeling part of the city and got the contract to dispose of the old transformers but ended up just dumping them in the woods with dump trucks and Warehouser got left with the disposal bill so now they have gates on everything and do offer seasonal passes for that but there's like 20 per section and they're like $400 so they sell out in like 20 minutes...
You were about 30 miles south of me when you were in Comet.I just got back from a weekend trip to Montana... we rented a cabin in Whitehall and hung out for the most part. Saw the sights in Bozeman, Butte & Anaconda, went to some antique places, ate way too much, sat in the hot tub a lot.
We took my wife's Honda so we didn't do much outdoor stuff but we did drive up and see the Comet ghost town. Super cool place...there are a lot of buildings still standing. Most of the equipment in the mill was gone but they left a couple of cages from the mine and a ball mill - I can't believe that was still there. There is another mine across the road that was just totally amazing... the hoist, headframe and ore bin were still intact and the cage is still hanging at the top of the shaft. You could almost add a boiler, put steam to the hoist and run it... crazy.
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Also saw a huge herd of elk running across the highway - I'm guessing 200+ of them, I couldn't zoom in far enough to get a clear picture once we got up close but it was really cool to see that.
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You were about 30 miles south of me when you were in Comet.
Those elk were just outside of Boulder, weren't they? If it is where I think it is, they are all on private ground and the owners do not allow hunting.
Any cool old ones? below is my collection. first one is pretty much a parts clock, the cabinet is in horrible shape. does have the key and all the mechanicals though. Second one is an Ansonia kitchen clock that was a wedding gift to my great grandparents in 1914. has all parts and key. cabinet is in beautiful shape. Need to clean it, it is a bit gummed up from sitting. Third is a 10 dollar yard sale find. works, and has key and most parts, looks like there is a missing decorative medalion from the pendulum. 4th belonged to my grandparents, it is a 400 day clock. kind of neat how the little tape of metal puts torsion on the 4 ball pendulum to spin it back and forth. I always loved watching it as a kid. needs some work, but has all the parts including the dome and key (which is not pictured) 5th one is a modern wind up clock that was given to us. needs some adjustment but looks great and has all parts and key. 6th, thrift store find for 25 bucks, Ingraham Mantle clock researched and it was probably made in the 1920s. missing the key and pendulum bob. have not got around to ordering them to see if it works or not.My wife has this thing for clocks... yes I said clocks.
1000 sqft house... 10 clocks.
It's fall back tonight... so I changed batteries in the smoke alarms and set all the clocks.