is this a joke?
40 mins SE of KC is the definition of BFE and the middle of ****ing nowhere…
There’s probably more cattle than humans in that county 🤣🤣🤣
If you think that’s ‘big city’, I envy your life 👍 not all of us who live in the concrete jungle, prefer it. 😬
@doc holiday13
Not trying to be a jerk but if I was consistently ending up with ‘chunks’ of projectile in my steaks I would be paying more attention to shot placement and/or my processing. Actually I did have this problem when I was younger because I felt guilty trimming a lot around blood shot...
Milkweed
I generally take a bunch of it out and spread it onto my chest and it sticks to wool and most other clothing material. Then I just pick pieces off here and there and float them as needed.
I thought I wanted to switch to BH until I read this thread…
Btw, PA allows inlines, sabots and scopes during early Muzzleloader season. Then they have a late dedicated Flintlock season.
Southern Outdoorsmen puts out some of the highest quality and widest range of info, mostly geared to the DIY, public land/mobile hunter.
I really enjoy Deer university podcast.
Look up the hunting beast podcast. It is not active (now is before the echo) but those old episodes are still some...
I don’t follow much hunting media at all and haven’t for a long time.
But as far as ‘hunting celebrities’, Jim Shockey always seemed pretty legit as an all around hunter?
For a lesser known name, a guy that I think has the highest woods iq I have ever seen in front of, or behind a camera is...
‘This disease that we have never been able to test a live animal for, is 100% fatal.’
Color me a skeptic on anything else you have to say on the matter.
Straight wall.
If you might end up traveling somewhere that is shotgun only and no straight wall, then I would get a 20ga rifled slug gun. 12 ga slug guns are awful to hunt with, especially sloppy triggered pump guns. I shoot a 12ga 870 with a mossberg rifled barrel and scope. It shoots 200...
Here are 3 things I would recommend paying attention to.
1.) Learn the biology and behavior of the animal intimately.
2.) Learn how the wind and thermals behave in the terrain you hunt.
3.) Learn the habits of the other hunters in the area.
If you study these 3 things and combine that...