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Gator

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Posts posted by Gator

  1. True. I fully appreciate the increased cost of doing business...NIH modular grants were capped at $250,000 a year in 1998, and haven't budged since then (if you can believe that load of crap)...try operating on a 1998 budget. Numbers are numbers are numbers. And after that initial building, Bruce never put anything back into the place, so I figured he was operating on the edge. I'd like to see the business succeed. I will keep fingers crossed.

  2. Like most of you, I'm far less worried about eating locally sourced fish than I am about all the other crap that's used to make the stuff around us, things that we'd have never even considered a decade ago. Teflon coatings. Microplastics in our shaving cream. I'm no Chicken Little, but there's enough data out there to conclude that many of these things are not entirely benign. The issue is determining cause-and-effect. I mean, look, it took 40 years for public acknowledgement that cigarettes might have some nasty stuff in them that's bad for you. And that was like, "Duh, of course" to most folks. I can't imagine how long it will take to do the same for the less obvious stuff we use every day.

     

    And it's cost-benefit, too. Try weighing some ridiculous allergy again the benefits of plastic. Non-starter. That is, until we find out that we've sterilized the human race by creating a cosmic Dr. Snip through some unanticipated avenue - like applying flame retardants to baby's clothing - we won't move on the issue. 

     

    So, since we can't do jack all about it, we should all just grab some wings and a beer and enjoy the games this weekend. Go Bills!

  3. I source my PFAs straight from the lab, so I know exactly how much to use to get that perfect flavor.

     

    Seriously, though, and not to hijack this thread, but over the past decade I have become severely alcohol intolerant. I have a hangover before getting a buzz!! I'd think that it's a me thing, except that there's at least several of us on this board alone that now have the same issue. It happened as we got older. Knowing how some of these chemicals manufactured in labs can interact with our genome in unexpected ways makes me wonder how prevalent this sort of age-onset allergy is these days, and whether it's linked to environmental toxins. There's begun to be some interest at the national level in this sort of general phenomenon. We know the incidence of childhood food allergies are rising, and it's not crazy to extrapolate to older adults.

     

    Anybody else here experience unexplained allergies with age?  Of the eight or so folks I know with alcohol intolerance, all are men. Obviously, I'm not claiming cause-and-effect with fish borne toxins, but it's enough to make me raise one eyebrow and throw this out there for discussion.

  4. Buy once, cry once. Price out lithium 12V disposable batteries, then figure how many you'd need over a few years. HInt: twelve Energizer plus lithium AA cost almost as much as a single 10 Ah 12 V cell. Not only does a 10 Ah battery perform for longer, it ends up being cheaper in the long run. 2000+ charge cycles lol if you believe it. You also don't risk batteries leaking into the camera...which has happened twice to me. Luckily, the external setup works even when the internal battery case is corroded. Honestly, I can't think of a single reason that anyone would use AA batteries.

     

    Just make sure to wrap the cord in corrugated, split electric conduit between the battery and camera to keep critters from chewing on it (happened once a couple years ago to me) and loop the cord over the top of the camera before connecting it so that it isn't dangling down and can't be pulled out easily. Pm me if you need pics or details. Trust me, this is the way to go. 

     

    Another upside is that you can use them to power your ice fishing cameras and flashers after deer season is over!

  5. I've had mixed experience with Tactacam. I had a couple Reveal X that worked well on trails but their detection circuit wasn't as good as a few other brands on field edges. One of them started having issues with signal this year. It would have one bar where others have four. Barely enough to squeak by, not enough to send HD photos. So, I contacted customer support, and they were very responsive - they're located in Michigan. Long story short, after multiple trips to the field to try various "fixes" and having sent the camera in TWICE now for service, I'm finally getting a new camera. Supposedly. The check is in the mail, as they say.

     

    I agree that XB is a great camera and I have no use for the LCD screen, but the XB is also discontinued. The Pro is identical is all ways that matter.

     

    Spypoint are great when they work, but when they don't, forget about it. Customer service is a joke.

     

    Finally, I'm running all of my cameras on external 10 Ah lithium batteries ($40 from Amazon - I look for cheap and have used Nermak) inside a Remington shell box ($8). The cord for Tactacam is not the same as most other manufacturers, you need a 4.0 x 1.7 mm cord. They're cheap. This setup will last at least three months in our weather taking 30-40 pictures a day, with power to spare. You also need a charger that works with lithium, but they will charge VERY fast with the right one.

  6. I've certainly heard that before - I use bean bags or my shooting stick rather than a lead sled. 

     

    Rob, did you ever figure out definitively whether the issue was your scope? When Scotty's went, it wouldn't hold zero, period, and he ran out of room with the scope adjustment screws trying to get it on paper even. That doesn't sound like what happened to you.

     

    Good luck in Ohio.

  7. You sure you want to admit that? Next kid born with three eyes in the Flour City, they may come looking for a scape goat. 

     

    It's funny that Brian and I were having this identical conversation just a few days ago, and our ultimate conclusion was, "follow the money". Like lawyers, the folks who generate the EIS also make money, no matter whether it's green lighted or not. As do construction and (at some point) the demolition crew.

     

    I think that this was a good decision. Too many unknown variables.

  8. You are shooting exactly the same setup as I am. Based on what you've said, it's almost got to be the scope. Scotty had a scope that he'd been shooting on his shotgun for 20 years sh$t the bed this year while we were sighting in. Drifting all over the place every other shot. It wasn't an expensive scope and didn't owe him anything, so he replaced it. I definitely wouldn't be relying on the Leupold for your Ohio hunt - it's good you ordered something else. But if your mount is too low, and you have some weird reverb thing going on through contact, then you could see the same eventually with a new scope too. This sounds like an issue that's best left until after the season to sleuth. Too nice a scope to just ditch though.

     

    One thought - I'm no expert, but I do know that if you over torque the mounting rings, you can damage the inner workings. Any chance you "tightened things up" when you sighted in this year?

  9. 18 hours ago, Spacecb said:

    Well I guess you boys are calling me a story teller / LIAR. Well that's not the case. Bought a switchback from Phil Sep. 2006. killed 12Pt. on Nov. 14th quartering away liver lung heart. Gross 140+ net. 133.5  2yr. old  weight 155. 2012 Nov.2 Killed 8Pt.  gross 140.6 net 138.1 weight 185 I also killed 163+ gross buck with my Ithaca in 1999 on Sunday at 12:00pm net 154.7  In 2013 on a sat. morn in Nov. I saw 5 yotes out of my stand the 1st one I couldn't bring in it scamper off. The 2nd one I drilled. Saw 3 more that day all were coming in to give me a shot but they caught a wiff and scamper off. The next day Sunday got back in same stand was watching group turks  monster hens and young ones 70+yds. off not scratching not pecking just hanging in a small grp. lost interest in them 1/2 hr. later these birds start clucking hard they are walking straight at this yote you could see this dog was getting nervous  pushing him to me so I drilled him hard did a flip went less than 20 and the big hens walk up to this dead yote and gave it the 1 eye look then walk off. Skinned and tanned them both gave 1 to this syco **** in Dansville big mistake. I killed my first long beard in 1996 and have 30+ birds to my credit. If you want to stop over sometime I'll show them to you. I'm on 259 mile north of ridge.  If you tell story's here you are digging yourself a grave. Happy now!!

    I looked back through the thread, and didn't get the same vibe you did. IMHO, everybody loves story tellers. And we know that fisherman is Latin for liar, right? This is an easygoing, friendly community. Sorry you felt the need to defend yourself (not quite sure against what, but that's okay). It sounds like you've had many successes. I smell mahogany and rich leather lol. Be well, aim small, shoot straight.

    • Like 1
  10. On 12/23/2022 at 2:05 PM, schreckstoff said:

    Found this in my muzzleloader buck

    C5FEA9D3-9285-4DD9-8FE1-0282B3CB93B7.jpeg

    NAP Spitfire, maybe? That's what I shoot out of my crossbow. Didn't lose one though lol. I think Grim Reapers are similar. Leg hits are rarely fatal, no matter what brand you shoot...it seems like MZ season provides lots of "clean up" opportunities. 

  11. Great information. I don't know about sexually mature, but we sure caught them in the lake...had to leave certain areas because they covered the water column, top to bottom, and we didn't want to kill fifty young ones to catch one adult. I kept one to eat - mistake - I think they spend significant amounts of time in warmer water. Neither cajun nor smoked was palatable IMHO.

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