|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 4, 2014 5:27:53 GMT -5
I would just hunt your side of the line and keep an eye on them. Putting a stand on their property is their right, like its your right on your property.
Have any laws been broken by them yet?
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 4, 2014 5:23:16 GMT -5
I would say we need some more, a vest or coat and hat would be good.
Our park hunts require this now.
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 3, 2014 15:20:19 GMT -5
I have hunted around amish also. Good people who follow the laws and will help you when you need it. I would gladly hunt with or around them. I've lived around Amish all my life. From schuylkill county in Pennsylvania with argueably to highest concentration of Amish anywhere in the U.S. to where I live now in Lawrence county. They don't kill anymore deer than the DNR allows them to. They are not slob hunters and they don't willy nilly just throw lead anymore than the average English hunter. What they do is kill deer that feed there family throughout the year. Unlike shot of English hunters who shot a deer don't want it and give it away for "charity". I feed my beagles all running season on meat from hunters freezers that went to waste. If you have a problem with the Amish killing too many deer talk to the DNR. They aren't breaking any rules that the DNR has set for legal chase. Do they drive hunt. Yep. Is it legal. Yep. Or is it the fact that most are a brown and down and not trophy hunters? Is sorry for the rant but I get sick of hearing the bashing of the Amish every year on this subject when they are some of the nicest most giving people I have ever had the priveledge of knowing. Maybe if us " English" would adobt some of there ideas and living our world wouldn't be in the state it is. I say until you take a long bow with no sight and arrows you made with flint tips and stalked deer on the ground and killed it don't complain to anyone about the purity of your weapon or the ease of someone elses Every good post. I agree one hundred percent.
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 3, 2014 15:17:21 GMT -5
andd this is a negative?? They are also cheaper to buy...
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 3, 2014 15:16:27 GMT -5
ARE SHOTGUNS SAFER THAN RIFLES? This commonly held belief is why some states ban rifles for hunting; But the facts might surprise them. By Jeff Johnston (RSS) August 23, 2012 By Jeff Johnston The Myth: Shotguns Are Safer than Rifles for Hunting The Reasoning: Because shotgun slugs have lower velocities than modern centerfire rounds, they are less powerful and cannot travel as far, and therefore there is less chance that an errant shot could injure or kill a bystander. This is why states like Iowa and Illinois ban rifles for deer hunting and only allow shotgun slugs or ballistically similar muzzleloaders, right? The Investigation: I called the Iowa Department of Natural Resources and asked for verification—after all, few people dispute that modern rifles are more accurate and have a greater maximum range on game than shotguns, so it could be that state departments are simply afraid that legalizing a more efficient arm will result in too many deer being killed. But I was promptly told by a customer service representative that “There are too many [human] populated areas [to use rifles]” and that "It's absolutely a safety issue.” But something smells like a deer gut pile in the Alabama woods. First off, it’s established that hunting is one of the safest sports. It is safer than bowling. Football, wrestling, swimming and all the contact sports aren’t even close. See here for complete stats provided by NSSF. Most of the accidents in hunting are attributed to tree stand falls and failure to identify the target. It doesn't matter how "safe" your firearm is if you fall out of a tree or mistake your target. So the only logical reason why states think rifles are more dangerous than shotguns is that if the target is missed and a bullet ricochets, rifle bullets go farther making more people potentially vulnerable to an unintentional shooting. But ponder this question first asked by Todd S. Bacastow, Ph.D. in his study, “Do shotguns and Muzzleloaders Pose Less Risk Than Centerfire Rifles for Hunting Deer in Pennsylvania?" The Question: If held three feet off the ground and fired parallel to the ground (and assuming no obstacle blocks it) what travels farther, a 150-grain, .30-06 bullet fired at 2910 fps, or a 385-grain slug shot at 1900 fps? It’s the .30-06, because, although the two bullets would hit the ground at the same time, the .30-06 would travel farther because it's traveling faster, right? The Data: As Bacastow’s data, taken from the Armaments Engineering and Technology Center at Picatinny Arsenal, N.J., indicates, there is a 100 percent chance that both projectiles will ricochet when they hit the ground if shot at a zero degree angle. And when they ricochet, something strange happens. Because the heavier-constructed, slower traveling slug retains “95 percent of its energy and excellent ballistic characteristics after initially hitting the ground” on average it travels farther in total distance than the .30-06. Check out the graphs in the study for the precise numbers. So if you said .30-06—under the specified shot angle conditions—you are wrong. Shotgun slugs tend to ricochet further. (Keep in mind, of course, that as shot angle is increased, the before-ricochet distance increases as ricochet distance decreases, and therefore the .30-06 travels farther when shot angles increase past about 5 degrees.) The Anti-Spin: While anti-gunners might use this counter-intuitive information to simply say, "OK then, shotguns are just as dangerous as rifles” and try to ban both for hunting, the reality is, both are statistically extremely safe. The anti's hate hunting and are scared of a hunter's tools, so they will always spin it. Meanwhile, I’m calling 1-800 BullShooters on Iowa and Illinois and the handful of other states that cite rifles are more dangerous than shotguns as a reason to ban them for hunting. If hunters follow the NRA’s rules of safe gun handling, there would never be an accident, regardless of the arm used. Also, many hunters hunt from elevated treestands, which dramatically decreases the chance of ricochet. The Conclusion: Rifles are just as safe as shotguns. Facts, ballistic data and state-injury statistics prove it. Link to the study www.ihea.com/_assets/documents/AFWA_Presentation_9-18-07.pdf
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 3, 2014 5:37:56 GMT -5
I like the change in coyote permission requirements.
312 IAC 9-3-12: Allow coyotes to be taken year-round without written permission of the landowner. Coyotes can be taken during the hunting and trapping season (October 15-March 15) or year-round on private land with written permission of the landowner. Removing the requirement for written permission would make it easier for individuals to remove nuisance coyotes at anytime. Permission of the landowner or tenant would still be required, but it would not have to be in writing.
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 3, 2014 5:36:22 GMT -5
I support the changes.
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 2, 2014 13:12:42 GMT -5
yes
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 2, 2014 6:01:03 GMT -5
might try to hunt OH with my crossbow..
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 2, 2014 6:00:12 GMT -5
me too. I have the tags.
I saw 3 toms while squirrel hunting yesterday morning..
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Sept 1, 2014 11:54:08 GMT -5
I will second this broadhead
Slick Trick RAZORTRICK
very good for low poundage bows.
I shoot the magnums ST with my 240lb matrix crossbow. It shoots like a field point at 355fps and shoots right through deer and turkey.
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Aug 31, 2014 8:19:45 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Aug 31, 2014 7:47:52 GMT -5
killed one last night, only seen the one. Cutting on shagbarks!
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Aug 31, 2014 5:08:19 GMT -5
I have added 10% pork fat, which I get for free from my processor. Add this to venison and it patties up and adds some flavor. Still you have to be careful not to over cook it.
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Aug 31, 2014 5:04:39 GMT -5
nice shooting!
good luck!
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Aug 30, 2014 12:44:36 GMT -5
burlys inside of my heater body suit when it gets really cold...
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Aug 30, 2014 12:43:19 GMT -5
slick tricks. Killed lots of deer with them. No failures.
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Aug 30, 2014 12:40:36 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Aug 30, 2014 12:39:38 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by 76chevy on Aug 30, 2014 10:43:01 GMT -5
I am all for it. Lots of places I hunt offer a safe, ethical, 200+ yd shot...
|
|