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Post by bill9068 on Oct 6, 2019 16:09:07 GMT -5
The area I bow hunt floods for about 2-3 months every winter-spring from the Ohio river. Every season is a adventure when I hunt there to see what drifted in during high water. Water gets 8-12 feet deep in the woo ds. Here’s a water tank behind the tree I climbed this weekend. It’s looks small but it’s 6 ft tall.
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Post by Woody Williams on Oct 6, 2019 18:37:56 GMT -5
The area I bow hunt floods for about 2-3 months every winter-spring from the Ohio river. Every season is a adventure when I hunt there to see what drifted in during high water. Water gets 8-12 feet deep in the woo ds. Here’s a water tank behind the tree I climbed this weekend. It’s looks small but it’s 6 ft tall. I’ll bet we have several Members on here that can repurpose that and make something very useful!
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Post by featherduster on Oct 7, 2019 6:46:51 GMT -5
Cut out the top,bury it in the ground, then fill it with water and you have an instant pond/watering hole.
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Post by jman46151 on Oct 7, 2019 9:02:54 GMT -5
I used to hunt an area like that. There would be everything from small plastic bottles to fridges. Once there was a boat hull.
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Post by jbird on Oct 7, 2019 12:44:24 GMT -5
I don't get that much water...but once I had my neighbors wood pile in my corn field about 10 rick of wood as I later found out! Every spring I go out with my tractor and loader and push the debris off to the side so we can farm it.
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Post by scrub-buster on Oct 7, 2019 13:43:21 GMT -5
I walk the river bank at work after a flood to see what washed up. That's where I got the propane tank that I used to make my fire bowl for camping.
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Post by bill9068 on Oct 7, 2019 15:01:45 GMT -5
Last year it was an outhouse.
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Post by bill9068 on Oct 7, 2019 15:03:55 GMT -5
I’ve not walked the whole wood line yet. I will when seasons over, but I bet I find some more things floated in from the river camps.
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