Bulldog0156 wrote:Flint I don't want to get all technical but I'm pretty sure it doesn't become a spring until it comes out of the ground
Rick wrote:Appears pretty roiled for spring water, been raining?
FlintRiverFowler wrote:Found the mouth of an underground spring in the woods at work today. Baby blue hole. Only one I've ever found but not too uncommon in the flint river basin. I stuck some long branches down it and couldn't find a bottom. Might take a fishing pole out there with a sinker weight on it and see how far that'll go.
FlintRiverFowler wrote:Good idea. Unless gps stops working when the zombies come.
It's not too far off the beaten path though.
Olly wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Good idea. Unless gps stops working when the zombies come.
It's not too far off the beaten path though.
GPS most certainly will stop if the U.S. Govt falls. It's ran/owned by the Air Force and it wouldn't be too much of a surprise if there wasn't some kind of a "dead man" switch on it that if someone at the AF doesn't tell the networks to continue working every X amount of days the satellites will default to an encrypted mode like they were before 2000 when they because free to civilians or shutdown all together.
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
The Duck Hammer wrote:
Learn something everyday.
Olly wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Good idea. Unless gps stops working when the zombies come.
It's not too far off the beaten path though.
GPS most certainly will stop if the U.S. Govt falls. It's ran/owned by the Air Force and it wouldn't be too much of a surprise if there wasn't some kind of a "dead man" switch on it that if someone at the AF doesn't tell the networks to continue working every X amount of days the satellites will default to an encrypted mode like they were before 2000 when they because free to civilians or shutdown all together.
SpinnerMan wrote:Olly wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Good idea. Unless gps stops working when the zombies come.
It's not too far off the beaten path though.
GPS most certainly will stop if the U.S. Govt falls. It's ran/owned by the Air Force and it wouldn't be too much of a surprise if there wasn't some kind of a "dead man" switch on it that if someone at the AF doesn't tell the networks to continue working every X amount of days the satellites will default to an encrypted mode like they were before 2000 when they because free to civilians or shutdown all together.
OK, but I was using a GPS before 2000. It just didn't have the accuracy it does today. I think they claimed a 20' accuracy. It was later that the military precision or whatever was opened up. No problem finding that spring with the pre-2000 accuracy.
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
The Duck Hammer wrote:I don't use em much at all anymore. I got one for the truck but chunked that **** in the back seat a few months ago after it pissed me off. Atlases are still the way to go. I didn't realize it was gov run but why wouldn't it be. They control everything else
SpinnerMan wrote:Olly wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Good idea. Unless gps stops working when the zombies come.
It's not too far off the beaten path though.
GPS most certainly will stop if the U.S. Govt falls. It's ran/owned by the Air Force and it wouldn't be too much of a surprise if there wasn't some kind of a "dead man" switch on it that if someone at the AF doesn't tell the networks to continue working every X amount of days the satellites will default to an encrypted mode like they were before 2000 when they because free to civilians or shutdown all together.
OK, but I was using a GPS before 2000. It just didn't have the accuracy it does today. I think they claimed a 20' accuracy. It was later that the military precision or whatever was opened up. No problem finding that spring with the pre-2000 accuracy.
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
SpinnerMan wrote:The Duck Hammer wrote:I don't use em much at all anymore. I got one for the truck but chunked that **** in the back seat a few months ago after it pissed me off. Atlases are still the way to go. I didn't realize it was gov run but why wouldn't it be. They control everything else
I got one as a "present" for my wife because she can't read a map to save her life, so when she was navigating while I was driving, it was good for me
I love them. Use them all the time. There is just so much convenience and so much information. A few button clicks and you have your gas stop or lunch stop set or whatever you want.
I'm not a big fan of google maps on my smartphone. Are there any better products out there?
BTW, I was talking about the old GPS and not the one for the car. That was great for any time you were hunting new territory. Find a good spot a mile in the woods when scouting, mark it with the GPS, and walk right there in the dark without any issues. One spot I hunted was this little trail along this long straight road that was impossible to find driving in the dark at 55 mph, but I'd set the GPS and I'd know right where to park, hop out select the spot I wanted to hunt and then walk straight to it. That's actually the spot where my buddy saw what he swears was a wolf and he shot his first deer there.
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
FlintRiverFowler wrote:
Well, fucked up my dad's yard.
Glad I don't live here any more. lil brother gonna catch hell tho.
FlintRiverFowler wrote:
Well, fucked up my dad's yard.
Glad I don't live here any more. lil brother gonna catch hell tho.
Olly wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:
Well, fucked up my dad's yard.
Glad I don't live here any more. lil brother gonna catch hell tho.
I thought you sold those?
Olly wrote:SpinnerMan wrote:Olly wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Good idea. Unless gps stops working when the zombies come.
It's not too far off the beaten path though.
GPS most certainly will stop if the U.S. Govt falls. It's ran/owned by the Air Force and it wouldn't be too much of a surprise if there wasn't some kind of a "dead man" switch on it that if someone at the AF doesn't tell the networks to continue working every X amount of days the satellites will default to an encrypted mode like they were before 2000 when they because free to civilians or shutdown all together.
OK, but I was using a GPS before 2000. It just didn't have the accuracy it does today. I think they claimed a 20' accuracy. It was later that the military precision or whatever was opened up. No problem finding that spring with the pre-2000 accuracy.
Yea but the pre2000 use was only turned on in 1997 I believe. Before that no civilians were using it and then in 2000 they removed the restrictions on it further.
Who's to say that they won't turn it off again? Also like I said before I bet there are safety switches in place that if the satellites aren't given the right commands they will assume the US government no longer exist and probably just cease to function. That's just my personal guess though. I doubt during a zombie apocalypse GPS will work for long.
1989 Magellan Corporation claims to be the first to market in the U.S. with a hand-held navigation device, the Magellan NAV 1000.
1990 Fearing military adversaries might use the GPS system to advantage, the Defense Department decides to deliberately decrease the accuracy of the system.
1994 The FAA and Bill Clinton tell the worldwide airline industry that can continue using the GPS system free of charge “for the foreseeable future.”
1995 The first rev of the GPS system was finally completed in 1995 when the last of a full “constellation” of 27 fully operational GPS satellites is launched into space. Of those 27, three were used as spares to quickly replace any of the 24 active satellites that failed. The satellites, which weighed between three- and four-thousand pounds, circled the globe twice a day. They were situated so that at least four of them were visible from any place on earth at any time of day.
But it is great when you go into a new area for the first time. Back where I grew up, I would have never thought of it, but wondering into a new forest for the first time, it's nice to have as a backup.The Duck Hammer wrote:One of these days I'm sure I'll end up with a gps for hunting. It would seem I didn't inherit my fathers ability to memorize every **** trail, path, road, whatever he's ever been on like my brother did. Which I hate because relying on any amount of unnecessary technology is a bad habit to fall into in my opinion.
SpinnerMan wrote:But it is great when you go into a new area for the first time. Back where I grew up, I would have never thought of it, but wondering into a new forest for the first time, it's nice to have as a backup.The Duck Hammer wrote:One of these days I'm sure I'll end up with a gps for hunting. It would seem I didn't inherit my fathers ability to memorize every **** trail, path, road, whatever he's ever been on like my brother did. Which I hate because relying on any amount of unnecessary technology is a bad habit to fall into in my opinion.
However, it would have been nice to have as backup the one time I went archery hunting in a snow storm. I knew the area like the back of my hand, but after spending the morning trying to stalk deer, there was only 50 yards of visibility, if that, and I simply had no idea which way was north. I ended up missing my truck by about 2 miles. I actually knew I was wrong long before that, but decided to keep going to hit the road and walk back that way as opposed to risk getting turned around with the low visibility.
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
Bufflehead wrote:Think we disturbed this guys nap. First one I have ever seen along this canal.
Bufflehead wrote:Think we disturbed this guys nap. First one I have ever seen along this canal.
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
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