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The strangest sight while antelope scouting
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<blockquote data-quote="nicholasjohn" data-source="post: 1712074" data-attributes="member: 109113"><p>One of my buddies lives in the northwestern Minnesota, and one day the local farmers were having their morning coffee clatch over at the grain elevator. Somebody pulled out the pictures of a herd of elk in one of his fields. ( There were several identifiable structures in the picture, including a huge sugar beet pile.) The place was over-run at the time with oversized whitetails, but the nearest elk I knew anything about was a herd up in the Duck Mountains of Manitoba, easily a hundred miles away. The Red River of the north runs into Lake Winnipeg, and right through the valley my buddy lives in. There is absolutely nothing in this huge agricultural flatland that I would think a moose would find interesting, but they have been seen there on numerous occasions. I guess these animals sometimes just take off on a cross-country, and who knows where they'll show up ………...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nicholasjohn, post: 1712074, member: 109113"] One of my buddies lives in the northwestern Minnesota, and one day the local farmers were having their morning coffee clatch over at the grain elevator. Somebody pulled out the pictures of a herd of elk in one of his fields. ( There were several identifiable structures in the picture, including a huge sugar beet pile.) The place was over-run at the time with oversized whitetails, but the nearest elk I knew anything about was a herd up in the Duck Mountains of Manitoba, easily a hundred miles away. The Red River of the north runs into Lake Winnipeg, and right through the valley my buddy lives in. There is absolutely nothing in this huge agricultural flatland that I would think a moose would find interesting, but they have been seen there on numerous occasions. I guess these animals sometimes just take off on a cross-country, and who knows where they'll show up ………... [/QUOTE]
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The strangest sight while antelope scouting
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