Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
I know what you're talkin' about, my buddy keeps talkin' 'bout doin' it to Ol' Nippy.I banned Neuman's testes like made Neuman a more accomodating buck.
same thing happened at a rendezvous I was at with a buffalo,,.
As a novice shooter, I was having a hunting conversation with a lovely woman in Montana and she related the traumatic experience that caused her to resolve to never take another doe, when she shot her doe and discovered, on field dressing it, a fawn inside her. It was simply not the right time to see a pregnant doe so nobody expected such a thing.
I went home and asked my brother what he'd do if such a thing happened to him, and he gave me a leer and said "Eat veal".
*sigh*
.
.Here in Florida deer and wild pigs mostly eat acorns from the oak trees.
The meat has a bitter taste to it. I would eat it if I was real hungry but otherwise I will pass.
My wife's relatives live in Indiana. Corn and wheat growing area. The venison up there taste much better than what we have in Florida.
In Nara Japan the Spotted(Chital/Axis species) deer DO use the crosswalks. They also obey the crossing lights, for the most part. In Nara Japan the deer are so highly regarded that they are actually considered citizens & have been granted "special privileges" above & beyond their human counterparts. In the city of Nara one can lay down next to a doe & actually get to know the doe & her fawns on a one on one basis.
Out in Farmland America 88% of the White-Tailed deer dropped by hunters are dropped on PRIVATE ACERAGE, which requires the farmers permission to do so. That's because about 99.9% of the White-Tailed deer are living on our acreage to begin with. Driving to work in the winter mornings it is not uncommon to see deer lounging on folks verandas or standing around an outbuilding/house waiting for their breakfast to be served. With the number of hunters dwindling in number the deer residing on privately held acreage has increased dramatically. In all reality many of these herds of deer are semi-domesticated or in some cases fully domesticated deer that are now farm pets(100% fully domesticated).
It's fine if you get 'em with a head shot and they don't get all charged up..
Can't imagine eating wild pork!
.
It's fine if you get 'em with a head shot and they don't get all charged up.
Itsh der werms!Only way I'm gonna eat a feral hog is if I can cage the beast feed it properly and get rid of the parasites they carry.
There's a reason why most deer processors wont process feral hogs.
Itsh der werms!
Ticks burn.Among other things.
Those things are nasty!!! When I shot em at the weekend place I wore gloves to get em in the front end loader if I couldnt just scoop it up.
Damn things were always covered in ticks.
Ticks burn.
.It's fine if you get 'em with a head shot and they don't get all charged up.
Adrenaline going through the meat is what makes the gamey.
Then there's the worms factor, but let's gloss over that.
.It's fine if you get 'em with a head shot and they don't get all charged up.
Adrenaline going through the meat is what makes the gamey.
Then there's the worms factor, but let's gloss over that.
Duke, the below vid shows the elk herd I posted about. The road the elk are crossing is called "Short Rd." The E/W road behind(south) of the camera man is called "Oregon Rd." On Google maps going north on Short rd.(starts out North rd. in the town of Deer Park) about 3/4 of a mile or so PAST Oregon rd. you will see a long driveway coming into Short rd. from the west field bordering Short rd. Put the yellow man right where that driveway meets Short rd. & look down that driveway(Lakewood Creamery) & you will see the home with the four vertical white columns that you see in the vid. Then pan out & survey the fields in the general area.Aww, but this makes it hard to take deer to put meat on the table.
Deer are glorious and majestic animals, and taste good, too!
I can't even gun hunt anymore. Just don't like the way it disrupts the deer lifestyle after the guns go off.
I've seen how it goes. Once the guns go off, the woods are disrupted threefold.
Need to dump that gun I bought for deer hunting. Yeah, I don't need that. I really don't plan on doing that ever again.