I appreciate the offer so much! Unfortunately I drew the newly formed Tug Fork LEA. Did you find it hard to find the herd in your area? Did they hide out in dark timber until very last light? Just kinda curious how they use that landscape compared to western elk
I'm pretty sure I've already annoyed the area biologist with my emails and voicemails.....I'm ready to get this thing started. Maybe my wife wants to take our 3 month old son on a road trip this weekend.....HAHA......DOUBT IT!
I got the Tug Fork LEA. One of 4 archery bull tags for that LEA. I'm not sure how many cow tags were allotted for the archery season, but at least there won't be a ton of people to compete with running around there. I think it may be open to deer hunters as well, but I haven't heard back from...
I'm in Fort Wayne. I grew up in Ohio, but moved to Indiana for college and work. We get the last two weeks of September for archery and then the rifle seasons begin. We can hunt between them all the way to January. I'm just excited for screaming bulls. And the conservation success story of...
I've been applying for probably 10 years as well. I always send in my $20 and forget about it. The odds of this tag, let alone getting drawn for a LEA, start at 1:650+. I told my wife, oh it'll never happen. Wouldn't ya know it, I got drawn this year. She left the letter in our office, and...
I went from Indiana to CO. 6 1/2 days of hunting. $450 round trip flights, $200 in bag fees to get my gear there, $400 rental beater truck (and I mean it had dirt clods on the dash and the whole side was smashed in beater truck- probably my favorite memory of the trip driving that stick...
I know this is mostly a western hunting site, but it's elk, and they're in our eastern form of "mountains", so here goes. I've drawn a non-resident KY bull archery tag in a specific limited entry area in eastern Kentucky. I'm beyond excited since it's only 6 hours from my home in Indiana, and...
I've never shot a bear --- I'd love to shoot one, whether it be in a corn field or on a remote mountain. private land hunting doesn't mean you're not DIY or some sort of pansy hunter. take him out there and let him enjoy himself. anything to get him out of the house would be a success
I noticed that I had to turn the volume on my iPhone and in my truck allllll the way to max in order to hear this recent podcast, and even then it was still very quiet. Anyone else notice this? It was a very big change in volume levels from past podcasts
I have had the Summit Viper SD for quite a few years and it is pretty awesome. It feels super safe when you get all nestled down in between the arm rests, actually hard to stay awake sometimes when that morning sun starts shining on you. the most frustrating thing about them in my area is...