-
Posts
12,944 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
432
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Blogs
Events
Articles
Video Feed
Gallery
Everything posted by BilletHead
-
How neat! Good to see you again Eric. Good share thanks.
-
No but will add it to the list. thanks Dutch.
-
Yea I have shared that on here before. Somebody did something stupid above a low head dam during a high-water event. We were in a boat fishing below. Tried a rescue without us becoming victims. Too late for that but we did recover the body. I will share that someday we are together.
-
Man, I like this kind of stuff. Thanks Jeff! There is so much stuff right under our feet hidden in the soil. Shifting river banks, gravel bars and sand bars is the easiest places to find treasures. Treasures can come in many forms depending on the hunter of such things. One of the closest places to you Jeff is the Arkansas river in Oklahoma. I have a couple of friends that used to walk the river when low looking for points and old bones. Mastodon and Mammoth teeth, Bison caps (skull tops with horns) and of course points (projectile points) were the goal. Big flood events shift the banks and bars expose the stuff and low water events bring out the people looking. The first ones on the spots reap the best stuff. just like the point hunting Pat and I used to do all the time. It becomes popular and it doesn't matter there will always be footprints to be found no matter how quickly you get there :). Florida is a real hotspot for looking but diving is involved.
-
Pat and I have pulled a body out of the water at caplinger mills. I don't want to go that way.
-
Great report Daryk! Good people, good food and good fishing. Doesn't get much better. Will see you all at Taney fest.
-
-
Fun times! Thanks Daryk. Hey Rick looking good old buddy .
-
I doubt it. He can vote and conceal carry at least we know he isn't a felon. That is as much as an American as you can get.
-
Oh, I have done that. ๐
-
Merry Christmas to you, think of it this way clean clothes is a good thing.
-
It happens. We were fishing with @duckydoty for walleye below power site a ways below taney. He insisted on us using his setups. I threw one of his expensive megabass minnows. Same thing happened bail closed I have never casted so far the thing went almost out of sight. After it snapped off. Ooof now I know where I got my lessons. I will remember that. Pat will get that next time she goofs up with the fly rod. Thanks for sharing Anthony ๐.
-
There is no way except in a wad on a hook waiting for a channel cat to bite in my younger years.
-
Jigfest 2024 White River
BilletHead replied to Daryk Campbell Sr's topic in General Angling Discussion
I'm pretty sure that is when we booked our stay. -
She gets a lump of coal for Christmas! ๐Soaking no but after a good carbon seasoning and I mean a GOOD seasoning soap and water will not hurt if you think you insist. A follow up by wiping immediately and drying on a low burner on the stovetop or fire up the oven to dry. We opt for the stovetop. Just don't forget it on the stove. Cast iron is not stick free but it is stick resistant and EZ clean up IF it has that nice thin carbon seasoning. Good luck David I feel for you Bro.
-
Say it isn't so buddy!
-
Definition [edit] Cooking dumplings in boiling water The precise definition of a dumpling is controversial, varying across individuals and cultures.[1][2] The term emerged in English by the 17th century, where it referred to a small lump of dough cooked by simmering or steaming.[5][2] The definition has since grown to include filled dumplings, where the dough encloses a sweet or savory filling.[6][5][2][7] Dumplings can be cooked in a variety of ways, including boiling, simmering, and steaming, and occasionally baking or frying; however, some definitions rule out baking and frying in order to exclude items like fritters and other pastries that are generally not regarded as dumplings by most individuals.[
-
Dang right she is hot in that suit. Just a jacket for me now.
-
To both of you that is a fact. There are guys that sell and sell plans for wooden traps specifically for armadillo. Yes scented with armadillo poop and whatever. You can actually buy that stuff and scent your own trap. Many you tube videos on that.
-
Well, I like you know when there were many fur buyers all over. We had one that traveled from Joplin and went all over buying. He would buy one day a week in Schell City. I had a neighbor that bought from him also. Well between my trapper neighbor, Myself and my cousin plus the dog coon hunters he began to go to the neighbor's house weekly one evening. That became a hoot! Fur night. We would all gather in the basement near the wood burning stove telling stories until the buyer came and went. Special times with special friends. Out of that group I am last man standing. The fur buyers name was Gene Pearcy. You might have bought one time or another from him. So, my first fur sale was to a Bland from the town of Blackjack on the sac river and he bought at the sale barn Saturday morning in Nevada. My first gray fox. Sold some other fur to him after that. Then to Gene Pearcy and last to Bud Keller in Collins. Bud was a neat man. Just drove over to his fur house in Collins. Going in there were guys working for him scraping the meat and fat off of raccoons and opossums. The floor glistened with animal fat. Fur drying hanging on stretchers from the rafters while on tables bundled together were dried furs of all kinds. I sold him two bobcats for 90 and 100 bucks. This was also about the time when we could start trapping for otter and catches still were rare, but they brought top prices also. Not long after that the market plummeted. Nobody local buying that I know of. A few years ago there was an Amish or old order Mennonite guy buying near Olympia not too far from me. He would buy whole unskinned furbearers and do the skinning. I heard he went under because he couldn't sell what he had at all. Market was that bad.
-
Have you been out off and on all night long? With Pat on the spot light and me on the air rifle we took out at least a half dozen this summer. Plus a 120 and 160 conibar where you can because those are housecat and at certain times a small dog getter. No worries about the small dogs around here. The feral house cats too bad so sad. 160s on the ground are legal for those of you that don't know. Speaking of that we have been going berserk on opossum and coons. The turkey hatch is suffering terrible here. The mdc knows it. Extended season on coon, possum and skunk now. The are probably worse on ground and low to the ground nesting songbird population. With fur prices low because of (insert what you want here) things are out of balance. I'm going to do my part. You should see the brush pile with coon and possums I have going. Another possum added a few minutes ago.
