rebelp74 wrote:Redbeard wrote:Sweet my first night with the night shift and I've already won a match
Winning a match in the cali state forum is like being the smartest guy with down syndrome
HEY!!! Watch it, you Hello Kitty Wearing Wonton.
rebelp74 wrote:Redbeard wrote:Sweet my first night with the night shift and I've already won a match
Winning a match in the cali state forum is like being the smartest guy with down syndrome
Tiler_J wrote:FUCK DEER SEASON!!!
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
Tiler_J wrote:The weather this weekend didn't help us out, it got a little too cold. When it gets cold the deer move down the mountain, I hope they come back up by next weekend.
QH's Paw wrote:That ain't enough snow to make deer move. Are you kiddin'?
QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
AKPirate wrote:The sins of Boot and Gaddy are causing the Cali drought and knowing they have no limits to their depravity... :mrgreen:
QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
Tiler_J wrote:QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
We hunt between 6,000 to 7,500 foot elevation, we had 4 guys out all day from sunrise to sunset on Saturday and 3/4 of the day Sunday. We were only in camp maybe 1 and a half hours during the day for lunch and to warm up. Some deer hole up, but a lot of the deer, where I hunt, move down the mountain when it snows. They move back up later usually when the weather gets better. All of us hunted hard, in an area we all know well, and didn't see much of anything. Oh, and the picture is from after about an hour of it snowing, it snowed almost all day Saturday. Just sayin.
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
3legged_lab wrote:Tiler_J wrote:QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
We hunt between 6,000 to 7,500 foot elevation, we had 4 guys out all day from sunrise to sunset on Saturday and 3/4 of the day Sunday. We were only in camp maybe 1 and a half hours during the day for lunch and to warm up. Some deer hole up, but a lot of the deer, where I hunt, move down the mountain when it snows. They move back up later usually when the weather gets better. All of us hunted hard, in an area we all know well, and didn't see much of anything. Oh, and the picture is from after about an hour of it snowing, it snowed almost all day Saturday. Just sayin.
Tiler_J wrote:3legged_lab wrote:Tiler_J wrote:QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
We hunt between 6,000 to 7,500 foot elevation, we had 4 guys out all day from sunrise to sunset on Saturday and 3/4 of the day Sunday. We were only in camp maybe 1 and a half hours during the day for lunch and to warm up. Some deer hole up, but a lot of the deer, where I hunt, move down the mountain when it snows. They move back up later usually when the weather gets better. All of us hunted hard, in an area we all know well, and didn't see much of anything. Oh, and the picture is from after about an hour of it snowing, it snowed almost all day Saturday. Just sayin.
Haha! Yep, that's me!! I have only hunted this property for 25 years, I am glad to get some insider information about what I am doing wrong. Anything you would like to tell me about the deer on my property?
AKPirate wrote:The sins of Boot and Gaddy are causing the Cali drought and knowing they have no limits to their depravity... :mrgreen:
Bootlipkiller wrote:Tiler_J wrote:3legged_lab wrote:Tiler_J wrote:QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
We hunt between 6,000 to 7,500 foot elevation, we had 4 guys out all day from sunrise to sunset on Saturday and 3/4 of the day Sunday. We were only in camp maybe 1 and a half hours during the day for lunch and to warm up. Some deer hole up, but a lot of the deer, where I hunt, move down the mountain when it snows. They move back up later usually when the weather gets better. All of us hunted hard, in an area we all know well, and didn't see much of anything. Oh, and the picture is from after about an hour of it snowing, it snowed almost all day Saturday. Just sayin.
Haha! Yep, that's me!! I have only hunted this property for 25 years, I am glad to get some insider information about what I am doing wrong. Anything you would like to tell me about the deer on my property?
I hear they like bags of corn dumped on the ground! You might try that.
Sent from an undisclosed location on the river
Tiler_J wrote:3legged_lab wrote:Tiler_J wrote:QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
We hunt between 6,000 to 7,500 foot elevation, we had 4 guys out all day from sunrise to sunset on Saturday and 3/4 of the day Sunday. We were only in camp maybe 1 and a half hours during the day for lunch and to warm up. Some deer hole up, but a lot of the deer, where I hunt, move down the mountain when it snows. They move back up later usually when the weather gets better. All of us hunted hard, in an area we all know well, and didn't see much of anything. Oh, and the picture is from after about an hour of it snowing, it snowed almost all day Saturday. Just sayin.
Haha! Yep, that's me!! I have only hunted this property for 25 years, I am glad to get some insider information about what I am doing wrong. Anything you would like to tell me about the deer on my property?
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
Tiler_J wrote:Bootlipkiller wrote:Tiler_J wrote:3legged_lab wrote:Tiler_J wrote:[quote="QH's Paw"]All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
We hunt between 6,000 to 7,500 foot elevation, we had 4 guys out all day from sunrise to sunset on Saturday and 3/4 of the day Sunday. We were only in camp maybe 1 and a half hours during the day for lunch and to warm up. Some deer hole up, but a lot of the deer, where I hunt, move down the mountain when it snows. They move back up later usually when the weather gets better. All of us hunted hard, in an area we all know well, and didn't see much of anything. Oh, and the picture is from after about an hour of it snowing, it snowed almost all day Saturday. Just sayin.
Haha! Yep, that's me!! I have only hunted this property for 25 years, I am glad to get some insider information about what I am doing wrong. Anything you would like to tell me about the deer on my property?
I hear they like bags of corn dumped on the ground! You might try that.
Sent from an undisclosed location on the river
AKPirate wrote:The sins of Boot and Gaddy are causing the Cali drought and knowing they have no limits to their depravity... :mrgreen:
AKPirate wrote:Haha! We have tried putting out corn during the summer a few years ago for the deer around the cabin, the damn things wouldn't eat it. I guess they have never had any experience with corn. We couldn't believe it.
AKPirate wrote:The sins of Boot and Gaddy are causing the Cali drought and knowing they have no limits to their depravity... :mrgreen:
Tiler_J wrote:AKPirate wrote:Haha! We have tried putting out corn during the summer a few years ago for the deer around the cabin, the damn things wouldn't eat it. I guess they have never had any experience with corn. We couldn't believe it.
Sonofabitch! Well I tried.
Sent from an undisclosed location on the river
Bootlipkiller wrote: all the mallards I killed today had boners do to my epic calling.
QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
fifyBootlipkiller wrote:Tiler_J wrote:3legged_lab wrote:Tiler_J wrote:QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
We hunt between 6,000 to 7,500 foot elevation, we had 4 guys out all day from sunrise to sunset on Saturday and 3/4 of the day Sunday. We were only in camp maybe 1 and a half hours during the day for lunch and to warm up. Some deer hole up, but a lot of the deer, where I hunt, move down the mountain when it snows. They move back up later usually when the weather gets better. All of us hunted hard, in an area we all know well, and didn't see much of anything. Oh, and the picture is from after about an hour of it snowing, it snowed almost all day Saturday. Just sayin.
Haha! Yep, that's me!! I have only hunted this property for 25 years, I am glad to get some insider information about what I am doing wrong. Anything you would like to tell me about the deer on my property?
I hear they like bags of cream corn dumped on the ground! You might try that.
Sent from an undisclosed location on the river
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
Tiler_J wrote:AKPirate wrote:Haha! We have tried putting out corn during the summer a few years ago for the deer around the cabin, the damn things wouldn't eat it. I guess they have never had any experience with corn. We couldn't believe it.
Sonofabitch! Well I tried.
Sent from an undisclosed location on the river
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
Bootlipkiller wrote:Tiler_J wrote:3legged_lab wrote:Tiler_J wrote:QH's Paw wrote:All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
We hunt between 6,000 to 7,500 foot elevation, we had 4 guys out all day from sunrise to sunset on Saturday and 3/4 of the day Sunday. We were only in camp maybe 1 and a half hours during the day for lunch and to warm up. Some deer hole up, but a lot of the deer, where I hunt, move down the mountain when it snows. They move back up later usually when the weather gets better. All of us hunted hard, in an area we all know well, and didn't see much of anything. Oh, and the picture is from after about an hour of it snowing, it snowed almost all day Saturday. Just sayin.
Haha! Yep, that's me!! I have only hunted this property for 25 years, I am glad to get some insider information about what I am doing wrong. Anything you would like to tell me about the deer on my property?
I hear they like bags of corn dumped on the ground! You might try that.
Sent from an undisclosed location on the river
Tiler_J wrote:AKPirate wrote:Haha! We have tried putting out corn during the summer a few years ago for the deer around the cabin, the damn things wouldn't eat it. I guess they have never had any experience with corn. We couldn't believe it.
Sonofabitch! Well I tried.
Sent from an undisclosed location on the river
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
QH's Paw wrote:Bootlipkiller wrote:Tiler_J wrote:3legged_lab wrote:Tiler_J wrote:[quote="QH's Paw"]All the places I've hunted blacktails it takes a foot or at least 6" in less than 24 hours. Even with that, in the cascades they don't go much lower than 2000' anyway.
Basically, if the food isn't covered there is no reason for them to leave.
Put the Crown and PBR down and get out of the truck, find some thick brush. They're in the christmas tree size brush.
I don't care what species of deer they are, they don't migrate for dustings. People are more inclined to let that little bit of snow run them off than a deer would. Just say'.
We hunt between 6,000 to 7,500 foot elevation, we had 4 guys out all day from sunrise to sunset on Saturday and 3/4 of the day Sunday. We were only in camp maybe 1 and a half hours during the day for lunch and to warm up. Some deer hole up, but a lot of the deer, where I hunt, move down the mountain when it snows. They move back up later usually when the weather gets better. All of us hunted hard, in an area we all know well, and didn't see much of anything. Oh, and the picture is from after about an hour of it snowing, it snowed almost all day Saturday. Just sayin.
Haha! Yep, that's me!! I have only hunted this property for 25 years, I am glad to get some insider information about what I am doing wrong. Anything you would like to tell me about the deer on my property?
I hear they like bags of corn dumped on the ground! You might try that.
Sent from an undisclosed location on the river
AKPirate wrote:The sins of Boot and Gaddy are causing the Cali drought and knowing they have no limits to their depravity... :mrgreen:
Tiler_J wrote:AKPirate wrote:Haha! We have tried putting out corn during the summer a few years ago for the deer around the cabin, the damn things wouldn't eat it. I guess they have never had any experience with corn. We couldn't believe it.
Sonofabitch! Well I tried.
Sent from an undisclosed location on the river
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