Woody Morgan
62 Cal.
Yup! I have a .22 pistol even older than your rifle. Good shooters!It's a .177. Probably made while some folks were still using their old muzzleloaders!
wm
Yup! I have a .22 pistol even older than your rifle. Good shooters!It's a .177. Probably made while some folks were still using their old muzzleloaders!
I have a 500 yard pipeline... believe me, I know quite a bit about logging out a woods and managing it. My woods is connected to a 40 acre woods, together me and the other owner micro manage our deer properties. Food plots, bedding areas, cut some trees down to let light in, I will never ever let another logger into my woods... ever again. The last time was disasterous.
let’s just say I had about a 25 acre thicket after the loggers left... I started from that and planted persimmons, paw paw trees, let the mulberry’s grow, and black raspberry’s. I plant sunflowers in the pipeline.. and corn. The woods has about Three 1 acre swamps that are deep enough to trap turtle in. After 15 years of care and maintainence my woods is teaming with wildlife and the trees have grown significantly... My family has agreed to never allow it to be logged again.I think a lot of people will agree with you after being burned and the land tore to smithereens. It has been 10 years since I let a logger on my wood lot and just now getting it back to the way I think it should be, however, I know a logger that logs with mules and horses more for a hobby than making profit and I can tell when he pulls out of a lot all that is left is tops for the fireplace.
VERY NICE!!A little over 79 acres in Mid Tn...
It’s mostly hunting land with a mixture of hardwoods, thickets and plots..
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But I live on the property as well.
Those Eurasian, or collard doves are considered as an invasive species here in Arizona.Since I moved into a town I'm stuck with Eurasian doves and a very old pellet gun. Things could be worse. Don't pass up a chance to eat them. The things are tasty!
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They are quite a bit larger birds and don't have the long pointed tail that the Mourning Dove has. We have the White Wing Dove here too. They are in between the Mourning Dove and the Eurasian as regards size. On the wing it's easy to tell the difference between the Mourning and the others but I haven't yet got the difference between the White Wing and the Eurasion on the wing. Both the White Wing and the Eurasian have a completely different call than the Mourning Dove. The Eurasian has a sort of raspy screech when it lands and no white outlines on the front edge of the wings. It's easy for me to tell the difference when they land on the wife's birdbath at 18' from the shooting bag on the sill of my shop window. They have also made it all the way to Alaska.Are they easy to identify on the wing? Differentiate from our native doves?
I appreciate your comment. I let someone I carefully selected harvest what I want harvested. Anyone else on my ground with a chainsaw has his choice of waiting for the sheriff or the coroner.I have a 500 yard pipeline... believe me, I know quite a bit about logging out a woods and managing it. My woods is connected to a 40 acre woods, together me and the other owner micro manage our deer properties. Food plots, bedding areas, cut some trees down to let light in, I will never ever let another logger into my woods... ever again. The last time was disasterous.
Looks a bit like a large fur seal pup.
This is the strangest Black Powder gun I ever did see!Since I moved into a town I'm stuck with Eurasian doves and a very old pellet gun. Things could be worse. Don't pass up a chance to eat them. The things are tasty!
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