View of my camp
You've got very good tastes in locale. One of my favorite spots in the state. It is a bit of a bummer how much pressure it gets though.
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View of my camp
This example is EXACTLY why we do not aliow access to our ranch. BEEN there done that never ever againTwo situations arose this weekend for antelope hunters on a ranch.
Situation 1: Two groups arrived at the same location and scouted some antelope. Everyone had doe tags, no buck tags. Deference was given to the group that arrived first and an amicable plan that could likely result in everyone filling their tags was agreed upon. This plan was thwarted 30 minutes into the hunting season when a jerk in a 10 year old or so grey (probably Dodge) truck jumped out and fired two shots from the road towards a couple who were wearing orange and awaiting antelope that were travelling their way. The animals were probably more than 300 yards from the road. He was dangerously close to hitting the other hunters. No one harvested anything and a morning was lost after calling the game warden and trying to find the guy.
Situation 2: A hunter was scouting an open field watching 3 does and formulating a plan. Another truck pulls up, says they are hunting the same area. They defer to the first hunter who tells them his plan; they agree to stay in the truck and watch. After a lengthy stalk to 250 yards, the second group gets out of their truck and begins walking DIRECTLY at the antelope, spooking them off. The first hunter packs up and moves off to another area instead of confronting them.
I, frankly, have no tolerance for hunters like this. What is the desperate need that drives them to steal opportunity from another hunter (who is supposed to be something akin to a brother-in-arms)? I wondered all day at how we as a group could self-police behavior like this. Confrontation, with emotion and guns around, seems foolhardy. Doing nothing and allowing behavior like this to continue does not break the cycle. Public shaming of some sort seems to be a very effective way of curbing bad behavior. So this is part rant, but a larger part brainstorming of how to police our own.
This example is EXACTLY why we do not aliow access to our ranch. BEEN there done that never ever again
I heard this one from our local game warden. Father and son (about 13 years old, his first elk hunt) were hunting on the National Forest and had hiked a couple miles back in and came across a rag horn bull. The son gets set up and takes a shot, the bull does the stiff legged dance and is about ready to fall when another shot rings out, and the bull falls.
As the father and son approach the bull, two hunters (guys in their late 50's or 60's) come riding horses out of the trees. They tell the father and son it is their bull, to stay away from it, as it is "a widely known rule in Wyoming the person that downs the animal is the one that tags it." The father tells the guys his son hit the bull and it was "dead on it's feet", also this was his first elk, etc. Makes no difference to these guys as their behavior starts to become threatening.
Given the situation, the father decides he does not want to argue with these guys so he and his son leave the area. One of the guys on horses is a well known contractor in our town and is known to be a jacka$$.
In telling the story to our local game warden the father indicated he hoped the incident did not sour his son on hunting.
Hard to hear these kind of stories.
ClearCreek
You just described 40% on Nevada hunters.Two situations arose this weekend for antelope hunters on a ranch.
Situation 1: Two groups arrived at the same location and scouted some antelope. Everyone had doe tags, no buck tags. Deference was given to the group that arrived first and an amicable plan that could likely result in everyone filling their tags was agreed upon. This plan was thwarted 30 minutes into the hunting season when a jerk in a 10 year old or so grey (probably Dodge) truck jumped out and fired two shots from the road towards a couple who were wearing orange and awaiting antelope that were travelling their way. The animals were probably more than 300 yards from the road. He was dangerously close to hitting the other hunters. No one harvested anything and a morning was lost after calling the game warden and trying to find the guy.
Situation 2: A hunter was scouting an open field watching 3 does and formulating a plan. Another truck pulls up, says they are hunting the same area. They defer to the first hunter who tells them his plan; they agree to stay in the truck and watch. After a lengthy stalk to 250 yards, the second group gets out of their truck and begins walking DIRECTLY at the antelope, spooking them off. The first hunter packs up and moves off to another area instead of confronting them.
I, frankly, have no tolerance for hunters like this. What is the desperate need that drives them to steal opportunity from another hunter (who is supposed to be something akin to a brother-in-arms)? I wondered all day at how we as a group could self-police behavior like this. Confrontation, with emotion and guns around, seems foolhardy. Doing nothing and allowing behavior like this to continue does not break the cycle. Public shaming of some sort seems to be a very effective way of curbing bad behavior. So this is part rant, but a larger part brainstorming of how to police our own.
Hahaha the valve stem idea is pretty funny until the guy freezes to death in a blizzard that night because he was stuck 40miles from the nearest town without cell phone service.
Assuming that the alternator was sabotaged by some guy that got pissed off.Nope, he should have a dry truck cab, warm cloths & a tank of gas to keep warm and wait out the pending storm. What if the alternator went out... he'd be in the same situation.