(Other than the typical wash the oils off), I've never heard that trick for poison ivy.Bring some Dawn dish soap to get the poison oak off your hands regularly.
With blacktail and Roosevelt elk, if they hunkered down in the rain they would starve to death. The best bucks I've killed were during torrential down pours.Is the rain/movement specific to blacktail? I’ve always been told the rain keeps deer/elk hunkered down.
Legit question. Not trolling.
Same. And might I add, between 10:00 am and 2:00 pmWith blacktail and Roosevelt elk, if they hunkered down in the rain they would starve to death. The best bucks I've killed were during torrential down pours.
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Yep, that's the best timeSame. And might I add, between 10:00 am and 2:00 pm
A few things. Poison oak is no joke and can ruin your trip if not careful. Serous rain can make glassing and looking through your scope nearly impossible. Fog can be a real problem at times in some area.Alright all, I will be going after some blacktail in the Roseburg area this fall. More specifically the last week of October, this will be on private with a rifle. Im not a stranger to western hunting but this will be my first blacktail trip. What do I need to know? What challenges does hunting this topography/climate bring that maybe other western states don't? School me please. Thanks
Late summer/early fall it's possible to catch 60 smallies an hour on the Umpqua.If you’re a fisherman, you should spend some time on the Umpqua for half-pounders!
I’ll just echo what everyone else is saying. The vegetation is thick and often made of berry brambles with sharp branches, thorns, etc. You’re going to want the thicker rain gear and not the lightweight packable stuff. If you’re a fisherman, you should spend some time on the Umpqua for half-pounders!
Poison oak contains a lot more urushiol than does poison ivy. It has the consistency of motor oil or grease so you do need something like dish soap and a lot of scrubbing to remove it. Use cold water as hot opens your pores and allow the oil in deeper. If you really get into it just know probably no amount of scrubbing is going to stop the dermatitis.(Other than the typical wash the oils off), I've never heard that trick for poison ivy.
I know oak ivy and sumac have the same oil, so here goes:
Does that reduce the effects, or remove the effects of the oil?
We grew up as the children of children of the great depression, grandparents a step away from hoovervilles in iowa, if it weren't for the farms they grew up on. Anyway, old school types.
The type that wholeheartedly believes nature's poisons were next to nature's cures. So nettles=water, ivy=touch me nots, and just don't touch parsnip, so outside the typical steroid creams, that was the field remedy.
Unless we talk sinkholes. Grandma always said the cure to a sinkhole was getting out
I get it pretty bad, and have to be in it a lot. I quit caring, because there is no way to avoid it, trying is just wasting time with no change in the outcome. I just make sure I shower as soon as possible and isolate those clothes… haven’t found a way to deal with boot laces.Poison oak contains a lot more urushiol than does poison ivy. It has the consistency of motor oil or grease so you do need something like dish soap and a lot of scrubbing to remove it. Use cold water as hot opens your pores and allow the oil in deeper. If you really get into it just know probably no amount of scrubbing is going to stop the dermatitis.