Probably to difficult to tie the Traeger to the mules.Who packed in the charcoal briquettes?
I don’t have much to say about the tag, however packing in the briquettes but cooking on a rock seems contrived.What is it that we don't approve of?
haha I kinda figured maybe they were flown into the lake and hunted from there which means they wouldn't have had to carry the charcoal on their backs.I don’t have much to say about the tag, however packing in the briquettes but cooking on a rock seems contrived.
I could be way off though… maybe they simply forgot to pack the grill, or maybe the rock in that locale adds some nuanced flavor to the meat that the Meateater crew and their highly educated palates designed this hunt around.
Who knows? But I’m guessing Kingsford will soon be producing a Meateater blend of briquettes that will soon be promoted on the podcast (the deal for a Meateater backpacking grill probably didn’t get done in time for the hunt).
The primary reason the take of nannies is legal is because most don't take the time to learn how to identify the sex of goats when in reality it's rather easy.who cares what other people shoot? If it’s legal oh well.
Blah blah blah. Yeah I know, I’ve only done about 35 mt goat hunts.The primary reason the take of nannies is legal is because most don't take the time to learn how to identify the sex of goats when in reality it's rather easy.
Then they say "oh well it's so hard."... if you're willing to pull the trigger on something you damn well better know what it is.
There's also plenty of edu material out there, and it's well known that killing nannies in native range isn't the best. Hell his best friend Rinella narrated the Goat Alliance video.
Introduced populations can withstand 5-7-9% harvest rates.
Native populations <3%
Gotta think about the long game. Just cause it's legal, doesn't mean it's the best/right option.