Caseknife
Well-known member
I wish I had more of them, mainly for my own enjoyment. Maybe I better contact my cousins and get copies. Thanks for the compliments.@Caseknife, I love the old pictures. Thanks for sharing those.
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I wish I had more of them, mainly for my own enjoyment. Maybe I better contact my cousins and get copies. Thanks for the compliments.@Caseknife, I love the old pictures. Thanks for sharing those.
I do miss the old days however when you posted pictures on HT with dead whitetails and you in your signature Mariners ball cap.I very much appreciate the sentiment of this thread. I will however add on that you do absolutely have power over it as an individual.
I just had by far my most insulated hunting season as an adult, by choice. I hunted as much as ever, yet I never saw another hunter in the field, never saw an animal in the back of a rig, and never spoke to another hunter or check station. Hunted all public land, and 95% of the time never needed to worry about checking the GPS for land ownership. The only folks that saw the animals I killed in person were my dad, wife and brother.
No social media, very little picture sharing, and really only stayed in contact with a dozen or so friends and family.
It was great, and I'm very glad I approached this season this way. It reassured to me that I still hunt for the right reasons.
It was something else to catch up on hunttalk after tagging out, and finding out I was using the wrong gun in the wrong caliber, drove the wrong rig to the trailhead, used the wrong optics while hunting, and hunted in units that aren't worth hunting.
I also miss those who I hunted with in the past, who are now gone.I sorely miss a few real characters, now gone, who enriched camp and field experience.
You are spot on! I don’t have any social media and never will. Facebook has ruined almost everything the outdoorsman enjoys. I know guys who post trailcam pics up as soon as they get them and then wonder why all the neighbors are hunting the fence line. Then get pissed when “their” buck gets killed. Nuts!!!IMO, nothing has been worse for hunting than Facebook.
And I don't get the "tactical" and "extreme" with everything. Doesn't make sense at baseline but even so, the VAST majority of people eating that sh*t up are far too fat and lazy to be either.
Ahhh...the good old days of hunting next to the paved road.View attachment 209088
I miss the stories that the old timers used to tell of hunting back in the 1940s and 1950s.
I remember hunting the Kiabab over OTC, the only drawback was the line at the check in station to have a deer tooth pulled.I also miss those who I hunted with in the past, who are now gone.
My first big game animal ( Kaibab Deer ) was shot in the 1940's with my grandfather. That memory as well as many memories of hunts with my grandfather, father and husband will always be pressed lovingly between the pages of my mind.
But I have also enjoyed many hunts with my children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren, that have provided great memories.
Early in life my grandmother stressed to me the Importance of changing what I could, accepting what I could not change and having the wisdom to know the difference. Which I have always tried to do.
I am unable to hunt now, but when I was still able to do so, I insisted on doing things, what my grandchildren called, the hard way and maybe they were right. If one has the time and inclination, you can still find places away from the mainstream. My preference is to float plane in to a high mountain lake or go in via horseback. To me the horseback trip in and out was a wonderful way to enjoy the wilderness and provided wonderful memories and scenery. Fly in and hunt interior rivers via canoe can still provide some good "old days" memories. I even enjoyed spike camps, but in my family, I was in the minority. IMHO, "the old days" are still out there if your willing ( and have ) the time to look for them.
However; IMHO, not everything in the past was better. Bullets have improved, optics have improved, some even say the Creed is better than the Swede, but that one is debatable
Not a problem in the 1940'sI remember hunting the Kiabab over OTC, the only drawback was the line at the check in station to have a deer tooth pulled.
Not a problem in the 1940's
I was asked via pm about other critters on the plateau that can be hunted
For Brent : The Kaibab squirrel
For all others: Turkey, Grouse, mountain lion----
Dirtclod : Are Bison in 12 A now ?? Elk ??
April the Buffalo are moving into the Grand Canyon region.Not a problem in the 1940's
I was asked via pm about other critters on the plateau that can be hunted
For Brent : The Kaibab squirrel
For all others: Turkey, Grouse, mountain lion----
Dirtclod : Are Bison in 12 A now ?? Elk ??
Well... not ALL accounts...Agreed, by all accounts, the 1880s and 1890s were pretty dang awesome.