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June 10, 2012, 12:59 PM | #26 | ||
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Join Date: January 8, 2001
Location: Forestburg, Montague Cnty, TX
Posts: 12,717
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Quote:
I would contend that when a set of circumstances is described to you that doesn't make much sense (pun intended), or the explanation for the circumstances doesn't make much sense, then there is probably good reason to question the validity of it. There seems to be quite a bit of folklore associated with firearms, ballistics, terminal ballistics, and hunting. I don't see where passing on hokey information is beneficial to anyone. I actually find the notion of fawns being virtually odorless as per TPWD to be rather interesting. Just because an animal is "virtually odorless" to humans doesn't mean it is virtually odorless to predators. Generally speaking, humans don't hunt by smell. The implication there is that if we can't smell it or smell it well, nothing else can, and that would likely be an incorrect statement since our capabilities are much less than those of many predators. Above you also mentioned... Quote:
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"If you look through your scope and see your shoe, aim higher." -- said to me by my 11 year old daughter before going out for hogs 8/13/2011 My Hunting Videos https://www.youtube.com/user/HornHillRange |
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June 10, 2012, 08:05 PM | #27 |
Staff in Memoriam
Join Date: November 13, 1998
Location: Terlingua, TX; Thomasville, GA
Posts: 24,798
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Back when we raised two fawns, SFAIK there was no permit system. The deal was that the deer could not be restrained. Ours were free to come and go as they wished, over several hundred acres and a residential subdivision.
Murgatroyd wandered through unfinished houses, helped the workmen eat their sandwiches, danced on top of cars (dusty hoofprints as proof) and then returned to the house in the evening. Deer like cookie crumbs, the gravy from Big Brother stew, and honeysuckle blossoms. They will attack a garden hose, trying to kill the snake. They do not object to scotch and water--and neither does a Polish game cock. Papillon went back to the woods. Murgatroyd stayed, figuring he had a good thing going. He socialized well with a palomino gelding, a goat, a goose, two cats and the shepherd. |
June 11, 2012, 12:42 PM | #28 |
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Join Date: March 15, 2010
Posts: 8,236
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I have a squirrel, I think it's illegal to have one also but, the little dude has lived with me for years. He likes nuts...alOt!! An occasional treat of Cheetos or a McDonald's French fry is not rejected either. He was raised on a bottle, never expected to survive but several years later still going strong. He's pretty social and likes to wrestle... But... A very sore looser lol
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Woohoo, I’m back In Texas!!! |
June 11, 2012, 09:40 PM | #29 |
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Join Date: November 13, 1998
Location: Terlingua, TX; Thomasville, GA
Posts: 24,798
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I really doubt that having a pet squirrel is illegal in Texas. My father had some that would come when "chirped" at, enjoying pecans. Quail are easily gentled down to come when called, just like deer. And, I found, cottontails will get used to a person such that they just sit and watch and don't run away.
Food = welfare for critters. |
June 14, 2012, 05:57 PM | #30 | |
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Join Date: November 26, 2006
Posts: 1,102
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Quote:
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.44 Special: For those who get it, no explanation is necessary. For those who don't, no explanation is possible. |
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June 15, 2012, 01:32 PM | #31 | ||
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Join Date: February 15, 2009
Location: Kodiak, Alaska
Posts: 2,118
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"To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms, and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them." -Richard Henry Lee, Virginia delegate to the Continental Congress, initiator of the Declaration of Independence, and member of the first Senate, which passed the Bill of Rights. |
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June 15, 2012, 01:46 PM | #32 |
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Join Date: June 15, 2012
Posts: 27
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Shooting yotes!
yep those coyotes are a serious issue around where i live (60 miles from dallas, texas) the other day when i let my dog out to use the restroom (chihuahua) a coyote was walking les then 50 feet from my front door. im starting to feel the need to carry a revolver on me just to let my dog use the restroom... yet people say its wrong that we hunters shoot coyotes? happy hunting
-Corey |
June 15, 2012, 07:16 PM | #33 |
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Join Date: November 20, 2007
Location: South Western OK
Posts: 3,112
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Hunters are not killing enough coyotes. Fort Sill started a good thing last muzzleloader deer season; kill a coyote and get your choice of hunting areas at the next days drawing.
In SW OK the coyotes get over one third of the fawns, bobcats get a few. i killed two big boar hogs in the act of eating fawns. The game commissions of some states do little to help the situation: Here in OK we cannot shoot coyotes at night. Some states actually have a season on coyotes. NY has a season but does let its hunters kill coyotes at night. i have a rifle in the truck 27/7 and often pop coyotes in fields. |
June 16, 2012, 05:23 AM | #34 |
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Join Date: November 26, 2006
Posts: 1,102
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Here in MI there is a season, but a landowner can kill a coyote that's "doing or about to do damage" anytime.
Ever seen a coyote that's NOT about to do damage?
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.44 Special: For those who get it, no explanation is necessary. For those who don't, no explanation is possible. |
June 16, 2012, 08:42 AM | #35 | |
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Join Date: December 17, 2007
Location: SOUTHEAST, OHIO
Posts: 5,970
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Quote:
Dad brought it in , mom fed it with an eyedropper and us kids named him Tippy. It was our house pet for many years. Tippy would go to the front door when it wanted out and come back to the front porch when it wanted back in. His favorite place to stretch out was across the top of the back of the recliner. He would sleep there and if you were sitting in the recliner he would crawl down and lay around your neck. Well Tippy got to be probably 4-5 yrs old and one evening was laying on the back of the recliner. We were all watching T.V. and my oldest brother came in, plopped down in the recliner and Tippy, which had never shown any aggression, jumped on brother head and ran circle's around his head biting chunks out of him. Dad snatched Tippy and squashed his head like a grape... ...moral of the story: You can't take a wild animal and totally domesticate it. Getting back on the 'yote' topic, yotes being extremely bad around these parts, I shoot them whenever I get one in the cross hairs. As most of the neighbors do as well. |
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June 17, 2012, 11:32 PM | #36 |
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Join Date: July 21, 2011
Location: Idaho
Posts: 7,839
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there is a doe frequenting my place, I have found fawn tracks in my driveway after recent rains, I have never seen that fawn but I am either seeing coyotes or hearing them on a daily basis...I freaking hate these wild mutt dogs when they are intent on eating my bucks 3 years before they're ready
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ignore my complete lack of capitalization. I still have no problem correcting your grammar. I never said half the stuff people said I did-Albert Einstein You can't believe everything you read on the internet-Benjamin Franklin |
June 17, 2012, 11:51 PM | #37 |
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Join Date: December 9, 2011
Posts: 177
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Fawns are pretty well protected by their nature, but shoot coyotes anyway. My fawn would be on my lap and my black lab never even noticed it. Couldnt smell it or see it. Hard to believe but it's true.
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