The Memory Isn't What It Used To Be

B&CTom

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Over the years, I found it hard to keep track of which ivories belong to which hunt. It seemed like a lot of them looked remarkably similar; especially the smaller bulls. I started to write the year on the root of the tooth. Does anyone else have a better idea, or do something differently?

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Small plastic cylinders that are threaded and attach to each other.
I think they were found by my bride at Walmart,in the craft section.
Hopefully this helps.
 

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Over the years, I found it hard to keep track of which ivories belong which hunt. It seemed like a lot of them looked remarkably similar; especially the smaller bulls. I started right the year on the root of the tooth. Doesn't anyone else have a better idea, or do something differently?

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I don't have near that collection. But you know what they say about a happy wife.20241123_113054.jpg
 
I do the exact same thing as OP, write the year on it with a sharpie. I've lost a good number of them too, wish I'd have taken more care to keep better track of them in my earlier years. I try to journal all of my elk hunts so I can associate them with my dated ivories when walking down memory lane.

I've got a jar full of elk ivories from my grandpa from elk that he killed. It holds a lot of value to me. Wish he was still around to tell me the stories.
 
When I remember they go in this wood box I made when I was a freshman in high school. We could only use hand tools probably only wood project I’ll ever do
 
Wise move, @WildWill . Sad but true- while I couldn't identify which years some of the ivories belong to without those dates, I can remember the hunts down to the last detail. Yet I struggle remembering birthdays, etc. Including my own this year!
 
I have over 80 sets in various containers.

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They're all mixed up.
 
My wife had a pair of ivory earrings on the other day and she asked me if they were the ones I got her made from my big
Wyoming bull or the ones that my dad had made from a set he carried in his pocket through the war walking beaches in San Clemente and towing targets for the Navy in the San Pedro Strait while in the Coast Guard. I couldn't remember, so no, I don't have a very good system going.
 
I remember taking an elk through the game check south of Missoula when I was in college. They asked me if they could look at the ivories and I told them I didn’t take them. I watched the one guys jaw drop and have taken them ever since. I’ve given most of them away though.
 
I have forgotten to take some and misplaced others. Have a few laying around here and there.

I’ll tell you something worse than forgetting to take ivories. I helped a friend quarter up a bull using the gutless method. We got the quarters and the back straps off and he said ok let’s go. I said what about the tenderloins. He said I never take those. I couldn’t believe it. So I took them.
 
In years past I put them in film canisters with the date of the kill. In post film years I categorize them this way:

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Back when I started "collecting" them, I would put them in a 35mm film canister. On it I would write the date, 6x6 (or whatever), range/distance taken and if I recovered the bullet that would go in there too. Since the 35mm film canisters have gone the way of the dodo, I now just put them in a small ziplock with the above info, and also the license/tag, etc. Everything is kept in a large gallon ziplock.
 
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