I'd agree that generally females are better shooters, and I've seen it with many rifles I'd consider heavy kickers for their body size.Form and I have butted heads on a few topics on here over the years, mostly trying to gain an understanding of what exactly the other is trying to accomplish. At the end of it all, we are after the same goal, and I’ve found that just about all of his sentiments prove to ring true when you are in the field.
The statement I quoted above is 100% seen and proven in my experience shooting/hunting/guiding/instructing for the last 25 years.
It doesn’t matter the shooter skill level, gender, temperature, the terrain, the wind, whether on targets or animals, the color of pants they are wearing, or who they voted for… The easier the gun is to shoot, the higher the success rate. Nothing rings more true in shooting/killing for me.
Although mentioning gender, in general, any females I’ve shot with and taught have been more proficient shooters with the same level of experience when compared to males. What’s interesting about this in a “masculinity” thread is that they are almost always shooting smaller caliber bullets which are easier to shoot. Food for thought for the tough guys.
Half a head at 100 yards?When i started hunting in the 70's, we were in an area with maybe 20% success and you might see 1 animal during a 9-day season. If it was a legal animal, you took whatever shot you could get and angle the bullet into an anchor or kill shot. Preferred shot was high shoulder, the less it moved the better cause it would usually run downhill into the thickest stuff around.
Rifle hunting - Say critter is 100 yds away, looking at you/me, antsy getting ready to bolt - can see one eye, half a head and a big antler, couple trees, the rear half of guts + butt end. Is it a hunting story about the big one that got away or are you quartering that animal? My guess is that most guys would be telling a story around campfire that night. A few would be packing out meat.
Well, you listen here, sonny. Let me tell you about growing up in rural Wyoming. Back then, trust was earned. You’d ride your cart and buggy down to the local woodworker’s home and enjoy fresh mead with him while you built a sturdy relationship through mutual storytelling about rural Wyoming. That’s how you know. Common sense.
Yes sir I've been there dozens of times, maybe over a hundred.They ought to be accurate.. they take twenty minutes to set up and take the shot, lol.
My wife and a buddy's mom are deadly but about give me a heart attack waiting for her to shoot.
If you’ve never been off by 50% in weird hard to call winds, then you are amazing. At ground level in this picture where the fire fighter is there is no wind - until you get above tree tops. I’m quite impressed you can make accurate calls when shooting across a canyon like this.50% off isn't a experienced shooter then.
"This experienced racecar driver only crashes leaving the pits 50% of the time"
This is goldenYes sir I've been there dozens of times, maybe over a hundred.
2nd ex wife one time said really pissy "just shoot it yourself, you asshole!". Heavy horned buck still hangs on my wall as a reminder that a feller only has so much patience .
Honestly I feel bad for you guys that didn’t have the opportunity to grow up around competent role models. Your question makes it clear nobody in your life cared enough to help or teach you much. It must be hard not being able to tell if someone has their head straight or not.How do you find them a credible source of information with no demonstrated validity of their information?
I also feel bad for you - the ability to understand a credible source from someone without a clue is an important skill. It can’t be easy butting heads about simple things that the other person (and many others) have already figured out and have had reliable success with. You seem upset that history has shown that many larger calibers actually kill things quite well - it’s too bad you can’t learn from those who came before you. I enjoyed soaking things in from the old timers that had experience with things I was interested in - it must have really sucked that you didn’t have these types of people in your life.Well, you listen here, sonny. Let me tell you about growing up in rural Wyoming. Back then, trust was earned. You’d ride your cart and buggy down to the local woodworker’s home and enjoy fresh mead with him while you built a sturdy relationship through mutual storytelling about rural Wyoming. That’s how you know. Common sense.
It’s the internet dude. For all we know you could be a 17 year old girl getting your rocks off by trolling middle aged hunters on a back country hunting forum.Honestly I feel bad for you guys that didn’t have the opportunity to grow up around competent role models. Your question makes it clear nobody in your life cared enough to help or teach you much. It must be hard not being able to tell if someone has their head straight or not.
If can’t tell when someone has backcountry experience, that must be a bummer. 17 year old girls sound a lot different from 57 year old guys who where born into multigenerational western hunting families, and have been doing what many of you claim to be interested in our entire adult lives.It’s the internet dude. For all we know you could be a 17 year old girl getting your rocks off by trolling middle aged hunters on a back country hunting forum.
Relax.
Ah there's the problem. You are 57 and know everything.If can’t tell when someone has backcountry experience, that must be a bummer. 17 year old girls sound a lot different from 57 year old guys who where born into multigenerational western hunting families, and have been doing what many of you claim to be interested in our entire adult lives.
I’ve always said if someone can come up with a better idea I’ll be the first to adopt it. I’ve used that philosophy on all my hunting and shooting gear, and how I hunt since junior high. I’ve had more time to refine things than younger guys and have been surrounded by guys who have had their shit together the whole time - I’d be a complete knuckle head if after 4 decades I didn’t have any solid equipment choices and methods. I never claim to know everything, but there are few truly new issues and topics every year.Ah there's the problem. You are 57 and know everything.
If you haven’t already, give “Clark’s Quiche” a try:And besides making quiche, I smoke some mean salmon.
Yesterday
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Maybe there needs to be a rokslide quiche cook off!! Invite all of the 57+ roksliders to judge it, so there can definitely be no concensus, and tell how no one knows shit about quiche and back in the day, with an onion on their belt, quiche was for children and women that couldn't handle the "recoil" of a real breakfast.
Given you think I hate large calibers: What cartridge have I killed the majority of my animals with?You seem upset that history has shown that many larger calibers actually kill things quite well - it’s too bad you can’t learn from those who came before you.
If you haven’t already, give “Clark’s Quiche” a try:
Clark's Quiche
This recipe is excellent served for breakfast with fruit or at lunch or dinnertime with a salad. This recipe makes two 9 inch pies. The reason for this is because if you only make one you will hate yourself the next day when there are no leftovers. The quiche microwaves well the next day. In fact most people say that the flavors have blended better on the second day... If in the strange case that you are filled up with one pie, this is a great gift to give a friend or relative, or if you are stingy...it freezes well with tin foil.
Submitted by Clark Hamblen
Prep Time:
15 mins
Cook Time:
1 hr
Additional Time:
10 mins
Total Time:
1 hr 25 mins
Servings:
16
Yield:
2 (9 inch) pies
Ingredients
- ½ pound thick sliced bacon
- 1 (10 ounce) package frozen chopped spinach, thawed
- 1 (8 ounce) container sour cream
- salt and pepper to taste
- 2 (9 inch) unbaked pie crusts
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 onion, finely diced
- ½ pound fresh mushrooms, finely diced
- 2 cups finely diced smoked ham
- 8 ounces Monterey Jack cheese, shredded
- 8 ounces Cheddar cheese, shredded
- 4 ounces Parmesan cheese, grated
- 8 eggs
- 1 ½ cups half-and-half cream
- 1 tablespoon dried parsley
- salt and pepper to taste
Directions
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C). Place bacon in a large, deep skillet. Cook over medium-high heat until evenly brown. Drain, crumble, and set aside. Cook spinach according to package instructions. Allow to cool, then squeeze dry.
- Heat olive oil in skillet over medium heat. Saute onions until soft and translucent. Stir in mushrooms, and cook for 2 minutes, or until soft. Stir in ham and cooked bacon. Remove from heat.
- In a large bowl, combine spinach, sour cream, salt and pepper. Divide, and spread into pie crusts. Layer with bacon mixture. Mix together Monterey Jack, Cheddar and Parmesan, and sprinkle over pies. Whisk together eggs, half-and-half and parsley. Season with salt and pepper, and pour over pies.
- Place pies on baking sheet, and bake on middle shelf in preheated oven for 40 minutes. The top will be puffed and golden brown. Remove from oven, and let stand for 5 to 10 minutes.