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I am almost becoming like a fucking militant anti-animal cruelty meme, along with cruelty to children nothing pisses me off more.
We need to punish the French, ignore the Germans and forgive the Russians - Condoleezza Rice.
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There is nothing more fun than hunting birds, none of those little fuckers deserve to live and very few do if they fly over my blind.
Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.
John Adams
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(06-28-2011, 03:39 PM)IMaDick Wrote: There is nothing more fun than hunting birds
LC, Dick thinks it would be fun to kill your beautiful birds.
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(06-28-2011, 03:48 PM)Lady Cop Wrote: well it is a hunter's thread.
Somehow I didn't find that to be relevant at all. Hahahaha!
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And I don't know why I find that so damn amusing.
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Hunting with dogs is kickass..it's a lot of fun watching your dog do what he loves, and what he was born/bread/trained to do. I did a lot of bird hunting back in the day with "Rusty". Good times, man, good times. Seeing him get the scent of Quaill/Chuckar/Pheasant..making the point and holding until I flushed and shot the bird, and then having him retrieve the bird to my hand. Makes a Papa proud.
However, the fox hunt thing that Puddly describes really sounds like bullshit, and not very sporting at all.
Of the millions of sperm injected into your mother's pussy, you were the quickest?
You are no longer in the womb, friend. The competition is tougher out here.
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(06-28-2011, 02:59 PM)thekid65 Wrote: Ahhh, I didnt realize the hounds did the killing, thought that was done by a human with a gun, and that the hounds just found/cornered the fox.
Yeah, that doesnt sound like a whole lot of fun to me.
It's pretty simple really, the English are at the top of the world with their socialising variety of sport. The fun is not in achieving your goal but the process of it, as well as getting totally and utterly sloshed during the process.
Look at Cricket. 3 days?? Anybody else on the planet goes "You for real?!", but it takes an Englishman to fully appreciate that 3 day process and the opportunity it gives him to drown as many pints or G&T's as possible during that time as well as giving their typical smart ass comments.
Then we come to Golf, which is nothing else but spending bonding moments walking across the country side.
Of course there is Lawn Criquet as well and the afore mentioned Fox Hunt. Hundreds of people and dogs after a single Fox? Get real, it is nothing else but an opportunity to try and show of your elitist standing as well as trying to get into Elizabeth's knockers, two very important aspects of the British life style.
That's why America is so different because it was mainly the peasants from England moving there. They didn't know any different but from doing things all by themselves. Just like Dick really.
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(07-01-2011, 03:40 AM)Mohammed Wrote: It's pretty simple really, the English are at the top of the world with their socialising variety of sport. The fun is not in achieving your goal but the process of it, as well as getting totally and utterly sloshed during the process.
Get real, it is nothing else but an opportunity to try and show of your elitist standing . . .
Ahhhhh! But, lest we forget the ubiquitous Tail-Gate gatherings.
Pure American blue-collar elitism . . . displaying official league gear.
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Go Eagles!
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We keep our hunting Close to Home
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Quite a big 9 pointer I shot right at the end of the roar before last.
"rock out with your mock out"
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A 300lb+ 8 pointer I shot last roar.
The rifle is a 338win magnum with a 3-12x50 Schmidt & Bender on top.
"rock out with your mock out"
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That's the beauty about the States, the equipment you get there at the most ridiculous prices in the world.
Nice!
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hahahahaha Maggot! this is what happens to people who want to hurt cute little squirrels!
eat worms!
AP Memphis Tenn.
A man who became separated from his friends in dense forest during a squirrel hunting trip in western Tennessee says he ate worms and drank muddy water to survive five days in the wild before he was found.
Bill Lawrence said he gathered rainwater in his hunting vest and tried to stay calm throughout his ordeal. Authorities say they conducted the longest search in decades in the 13,000-acre Meeman Shelby Forest State Park before the man was discovered Sunday.
Lawrence lost sight of his two hunting buddies on Aug. 31 while chasing a squirrel and became alarmed when his shots were the only ones he could hear, The Commercial Appeal reported (http://bit.ly/pakvdz).
"This is when I got turned around," said Lawrence, a corrections officer, adding he tried in vain to find his friends or their truck.
At the time he became separated, Lawrence was clad in camouflage pants and jacket, a hat and snake boots.
His friends reporting him as missing. Searchers used trained dogs, horses, all-terrain vehicles, boats, police vehicles and helicopters as they scoured the thick woods.
Meanwhile, Lawrence kept walking, searching for food and water.
"I was drinking muddy water ... eating worms. Yeah, I'd seen that on TV. I ate worms."
Lawrence said he had a shotgun, 15 shells, 2 bottles of water, a flashlight, a can of bug spray, a squirrel call and a can of dipping tobacco. But he did not have a cell phone to summon help.
He shot his gun whenever he thought he heard someone, but his shotgun shells ran out on Saturday.
"Everything was against him from the very beginning," Park Manager Steve Smith said, noting the helicopter spotters had difficulty peering into the dense forest canopy and searchers were hampered by extreme heat.
Messages left by The Associated Press at the park office for Smith were not immediately returned. A telephone listing for Lawrence couldn't be located.
Lawrence eventually reached a road on Sunday. It was about three miles from where he started out, but Lawrence estimated that he had covered about 35 miles by then.
Lawrence said he collapsed and was found by some passers-by.
"Man I was happy," he said. "I laid down in that road and just sat there. ... By then I was just wore out."
Authorities said Lawrence suffered from dehydration and severe insect bites. He was taking antibiotics because of the things he ate in the forest.
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I never, ever thought I would be posting in a hunting thread. But I went out hunting with my husband for the first time yesterday. On Sundays, you can only hunt with a bow in our county. We went out at about 4:00 in the afternoon and climbed up in the tree stand. Waited and watched for 4 hours and saw no game animals, but being out there sitting in a tree was truly amazing. When hunting your senses are raised to a new level. If you think you hear/see something the adrenaline starts rushing. Sight, sounds and smells become more acute. If it turns out to be "just" a hawk, owl, fox, raccoon, etc. that is perfectly fine, because you just got to watch that bird or animal in its natural environment.
While I am not about the blood and guts part of hunting and will probably close my eyes at the point of an actual kill, the experience is something I'll continue to pursue.
On the other hand, I have recently discovered that I love venison. We both love to cook and I particularly love to learn how to cook new things. So I will be thrilled if my husband manages to get a deer and we have already started planning the many ways we can prepare it.
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