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Hunting
Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Ramblings and Such From Hunting Coyote
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<blockquote data-quote="DSheetz" data-source="post: 2737408" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>That is pretty cool! Tree removal is not an easy job a person needs to be in and stay in good physical shape as well as on the top of their mental game for that and not everyone knows how to do it safely. My brother did logging back east in that part of the world and several people he knew died doing it, so he went to working iron said it was safer lol. He ended up being a rigger and doing crane picks as well as heavy lift helicopter picks. Alcohol abuse got to him as it does to so many people. Smoking was my self-medication of choice for a lot of years. Asbestos and smoking didn't do me any favors. They tell me that I was considered a high-altitude worker for most of my life as I have spent most of my life above 5000 feet. I took a lot of time as a kid learning to track and stalk animals, then a long-time learning how to target specific animals that were killing livestock. It all works together to get the correct animal as quickly as you can, tracking, stalking, and targeting a specific animal, knowing how different species of animals generally behave. Learning where animals like to hole up at different times of the year and under different circumstances. Every one that does a job and cares about doing it well has things that they want to learn and will study till they do, so that they can do it to their satisfaction, but then if you are a perfectionist, you will just keep studying and learning it's a never-ending thing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 2737408, member: 91783"] That is pretty cool! Tree removal is not an easy job a person needs to be in and stay in good physical shape as well as on the top of their mental game for that and not everyone knows how to do it safely. My brother did logging back east in that part of the world and several people he knew died doing it, so he went to working iron said it was safer lol. He ended up being a rigger and doing crane picks as well as heavy lift helicopter picks. Alcohol abuse got to him as it does to so many people. Smoking was my self-medication of choice for a lot of years. Asbestos and smoking didn't do me any favors. They tell me that I was considered a high-altitude worker for most of my life as I have spent most of my life above 5000 feet. I took a lot of time as a kid learning to track and stalk animals, then a long-time learning how to target specific animals that were killing livestock. It all works together to get the correct animal as quickly as you can, tracking, stalking, and targeting a specific animal, knowing how different species of animals generally behave. Learning where animals like to hole up at different times of the year and under different circumstances. Every one that does a job and cares about doing it well has things that they want to learn and will study till they do, so that they can do it to their satisfaction, but then if you are a perfectionist, you will just keep studying and learning it's a never-ending thing. [/QUOTE]
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Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Ramblings and Such From Hunting Coyote
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