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My dad always referred to shooting quail on the ground as "shady grady". I'm not sure where that one comes from, and a quick google search didn't shed any light on it.
Very cool. Get on yer dog and bone and tell me more about it. Did I do it right?I grew up in England and in the south east of London there is a high use of Cockney rhyming slang.
for example: “wanna go out for a ruby?” Ruby Ruby Murray (1950’s Irish Singer) Curry (Murray rhymes with Curry) so translates to “Would you like to go out for a Curry?”
are there any outside the box slang hunting terms you have heard over the years? And slang you and friends use out in the field?
LOL sentence might of been a little bit off but I knew exactly what you meant.Very cool. Get on yer dog and bone and tell me more about it. Did I do it right?
For hunting slang, I'm Deep South raised so most of mine comes from here, though I have had some out of state trips expose me to new stuff. Locally we say things like:
Slicks, nannies - alternative name for "doe."
Basket rack - small buck.
Racked buck - any buck with more than two points.
Everyone has their own phrase for "big buck."
Bar (barred) hog - Wild pig that's been castrated and re-released.
Dry sow - Sow that isn't actively lactating. Somewhat rare and a real trophy.
Song dogs, scrub wolves, calf killers - all names I've heard for coyotes.
People say "cat squirrel" instead of gray squirrel, "coon" instead of raccoon, and "possum" or "grinner" instead of opossum. I'm convinced the "o" in opossum is silent, no one ever pronounces it.
"Sit a stand" - to go hunting in a more casual way, as in "Nice afternoon, believe I'll go sit a stand and listen to the Braves game on my phone."
"Pushing woods" - borrowed from the Midwest. That's what we would call driven, European style hunting.
None of this are neccesarily exclusive to the South and I could probably make a list of just animal and place names in slang that would go on ad nauseam. But here's a few for you to mull over anyways
Other than the general slang terms I've heard my dad use and that I've seen people on here use, like "glass" (verb, to view an area/object via binoculars or a scope) and "bust" (when your quarry sees you and runs away), not much.
Though I did get a kick out of explaining to a guy from the east coast what a speedgoat was. We were on a Discord server for discussions about an online private pilot course we were taking and I was talking about how if I had an engine failure flying from Laramie to Casper I'd have to ditch in Shirley Basin, to which he said "[Auriga]'s gonna have to land in the cow field", and I mentioned it was 50/50 of either cows or pronghorn... but I used the other term instead, which he had never heard, so I had to explain to him that here in Wyoming speedgoat = pronghorn.
Personally I prefer the term speedgoat, it sounds hilarious but is also very fitting.
In the south these are common phrases you will hear.
In reference to making a good shot. “ I put the smack down on him! “
In reference to a future good shot. “ If I see that big buck Saturday I’m gonna drop the hammer on him. “
Wood ducks are called “ Swamp Chickens “
“ black powder season “ is muzzleloader season.
A buck fawn is a “ knothead “
and my favorite of all time. A hunter sitting in a blind or tree stand overlooking a pipeline or power line right of way is “ pipeline sniper “ or “power line sniper. “
Arkansas wingshot.The mentors i came up with called it:
"Arkansasing" them.
As in "you can't can't Arkansas them boy, you got to let them fly first".