Degree is in mechanical engineering. Have spent nearly two decades tearing apart and rebuilding commercial nuclear reactors both domestic and overseas.
Have transitioned to the management side recently. If you can pass a drug test, stay off the bottle, and like roughneck work wearing plastic...
All downhill. I checked all the water I could find. That’s where I usually head for with liver shot. Only reason I suspect liver shot was the coloring of the blood I was finding. I’m one of those no good out of staters with a wife headed for labor soon. This was my swan song for the season. My...
Ya agreed. My only argument to the contrary would be catching the liver and back of one lung. It’s very possible I’m just way off on what I thought I saw.
This is a last ditch heart break moment for me. I’ve been out in Utah hunting the high country in the Wasatch East since the opener this past Saturday. Shot a good 4x4 on top of the mountain. Shot felt good but it seems the deer jumped the string or I just plumb missed him high. Arrow went in...
Appreciate all the feedback guys. Figure I'll burn some more time scouting and just save camp setup for when I come back out.
It really is interesting to me the dichotomy on this....seems anytime there is a rule in place, some folks push it so far and ruin it for others.
Appreciate the feedback. I guess my greatest interest in the whole thing isn't necessarily "reserving" a spot but I'm going to be in the area a week ahead of time with some free time on my hands. Setting up camp seems like a no brainer from the "efficiency" standpoint.
If I setup camp early, its one less thing to have to worry about having to do when I go back out...just the way my brain works. "Make hay when the sun shines" is basically a life long theme....
For what it's worth, it's a "wall" tent setup off the beaten path. Never got into the wheeled camp lifestyle. So essentially a tent and some water jugs....does that change anyone's opinion?