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Say what you mean, and mean what you say.
Two weeks ago a guy that works next to me told me the story of his brother-in-law's elk hunt this year. He saw an elk that was in some thick brush off about 80 yards. He waited for about 20 minutes while he watched it through his 3x9 scope and waited for a good shot. After he shot it and walked up to it the darn thing turned into a bull moose. He did turn himself in and I am still waiting to see what happens to him. I think he is waiting his court date now.
Next one is of my uncle that lives in Victor Idaho. It is on the Idaho side of the Grand Tetons. He is a major elk hunter and always takes a few weeks to pack in with mules and horses. He is always very careful to put plenty of hunter's orange on his animals. One year the horse he was riding fell down out from under him.....dead. Then he heard the shot. Next to go was one of his pack mules. They scrabled for cover behind the fallen animals (don't remember who was all with him) and the hunters would not stop shooting until my uncle started shooting back and yelling at the top of his lungs. I don't know what ever happened after that. I am going to ask next time I see him.
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Monyhunter
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WyomingSwede
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When in doubt, do a nuclear strike.
This was the end of Indiana's premature experiment in trying to re-establish the elk at the far eastern end of its former range. Some 20 or so elk had been purchased and released in a rugged park in this area. The locals had them killed and eaten in short order, except for a few strays. The best I can determine, he'd shot the last of those.
Moral: Noble experiments often end ignobly.
Big Bore,
So you are a Hoosier now, eh? New Albany, Clarksville, or Jeffersonville? Those three cluster across the Ohio River from Louisville. I can't imagine why it would be called the sunny side of Louisville.
I lived in New Albany, Indiana and Shelbyville, Indiana for a time, quaint places in their own way.
Eastern Kentucky is deep in the Appalachian "Mountains," and things are a bit strange there for sure. Besides coal they don't have much else in those "hollers." Wealth comes from the land. Those "hollers" aren't much for farming, so it is a testimonial to the toughness of the people (or hard headedness) that they have eeked out an existence to this day.
I am from Kentucky and find parts of it pretty wierd myself. I like it though, especially after just having spent half a year working in New England. At least the people here are not as crowded together and diseased as they are in some other places.
The reintroduction of elk into Eastern Kentucky seems to be going well, but I do wonder if it will really become a lasting part of the scheme of things with yayhoos bumping the elk off in adjoining states too when they walk out onto golf courses, etc.
Black bears are coming back into the state now, with sightings from the highways down near the Tennessee border, and in the Daniel Boone National Forest. And the wild hogs are moving in there from the Smokies too, though the wildlife managers are making an effort to kill off the pigs before they spoil the natural habitat.
Kentucky once was "The Dark and Bloody Ground" where the Indian tribes did not live but went to fight their wars and hunt the herds of elk, bison, and other game that was plentiful before civilization came with the white man.
The Indians would not live here. They must have been Hoosiers too.
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RAB
[This message has been edited by R. A. Berry (edited 12-01-2001).]
I know what you mean about some of these NYC hunters.
I stopped big game gun hunting in the whole state because they let people from the city in. Not all (noone take offense to any of this), but some of these guys are complete wackos. Most of their big game hunting experince is reserved to canned boar in PA and if they are real serious a baited black bear that dresses out under 100 lbs.
One of these guys I know always told me about the 500lb canadian black bears he kills every year, I saw pictures from his last 5 years of hunting and it looked like he cut down a small herd of young Black Labs, the heaviest bear couldn't have weighed more then 150-170 lbs. We sat there and argued about the taco bell dog he was showing me for 20 minutes before he would conceed it only weighted 350 lbs
A lot of these always claim to have killed a "beautiful six pointer" every year, never see any pictures though.
And man, do the 'serious' ones love caribou, poor canadian guide, my heart goes out to you!
FYI, we call the BAR in 338 with a 50 mm scope sitting in see-thru mounts (they LOVE see-thru mounts) the "Brooklyn Uzi" out here.
Good Hunting
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www.rifleshooter.com
[This message has been edited by Bill (edited 12-01-2001).]
RAB---Jeff is about right, but not quite in Sellersberg either, kind of a bastard area that nobody wants. It's been over ten years since they came up with the advertising slogan about Jeff and Clarksville being the Sunny Side of Louisville, but between you and me, I really don't think it's any "sunnier" over here than it is over in Louisville
[This message has been edited by Big Bore (edited 12-01-2001).]
I weren't pickin' on ya'll Kentuckians, I wuz jus' relatin' what I read in the newspaper.
Fact is my Great Grandaddy moved to the Ozarks with his fith wife (He 68, she 22) and 27 kids (Several were older than his wife)in 1870 from Harlan County.
Maybe we're kin?
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Say what you mean, and mean what you say.
[This message has been edited by Ol' Sarge (edited 12-01-2001).]
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NRA Life member
(I keep talking like this and they are going to run me out of town on a rail, can you imagine what Saeed is thinking about us "crazy Americans" about now?)
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NRA Life member
[This message has been edited by Bear Claw (edited 12-02-2001).]