Wow Really TAG Bags

I'm glad someone else is finally speaking out about this. I, personally, like to fashion my game bags out of locally sourced organic fibers once I make the kill - mostly cheat grass stalks reinforced with elk dung pulp and sage brush bark. Once I finish butchering the animal at home, I return to the kill site to discard my bags to keep the ecosystem in balance. I think this is the bare minimum we can expect from the woke hunters of today.
 
Did he email you from a computer made out of wood or other natural materials? From a house that is made completely out of natural materials? Using 100% solar or wind energy? Wearing clothes that he made from materials gathered from the environment?

Also...how could you lose or leave a game bag in the woods? Fall over with your pack open and just leave stuff behind?

I have a feeling this gentleman has never hunted and possibly doesn’t even know how you would use a tag bag.

Prolly has a Holstein out back and drinks straight from the teet.
 
I always had the same fears. I mitigated them by not hanging my meat for over 3 weeks. This reduces the exposure risk to accepted levels. Perhaps a updated tag on the tags tag is in order.

Or you could arm wrestle this clown.
 
Ha! There's a guy from work who was just here. He's hunting elk this year for his first archery hunt and I mentioned B.O.M.B. bags. Went to check for him that they were still being sold here and stumbled across this thread.

I had returned from a hunt and washed out my B.O.M.B. bags. Looking around the laundry room for a place for them to air dry, I spotted my wife's wooden dowel rod rack where she dries her bras and panties. I hung my meat bags there.

I thought it looked festive, all kinds of bags of fun, so I took a picture and showed it to the wife.

She informed me that she would kill me in my sleep if I posted any pictures of her underwear and my meat bags to any form of social media.

I had no idea that I should've posted a complaint about that very real hazard Larry.
 
Ha! If i had a nickle for every wife who's panties were dried alongside TAG Bags...well, I could afford to hunt more!

Tell her to embrace the culture! I mean, really, how much sexier can a wife be to allow the two items to air dry together. Men get it, I think!
 
TAG bags make excellent travel laundry bags as well. I just spent 11 days in the back of beyond in Kenya and used a TAG for my laundry. Kenya has banned single-use (read grocery-type) bags, so no plastic.
 
Jason my friend, you are a freaking genius! Although, you failed to mention one of the most important mold discoveries, bread mold for making Penicillin. What TAG bags and mold have to do with each other is beyond me.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
I hope I find some TAG bags somebody left in the woods.

I know right where one is. And it's filled with elk tenderloin. It was left behind by my son after we broke down his elk. Didn't notice it until we got home. To this day, he gets reminded of that epic fail.
 
Back
Top