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#1
Non Hunting/Fishing Photos / Re: First Weapon!
Last post by Okanagan - Yesterday at 10:34:24 PM
I've killed a lot of grouse with rocks.  My best day I got two grouse in two consecutive throws, and my son was there as a witness.

#2
Fishing Photos / Re: Fish on!
Last post by nastygunz - Yesterday at 06:25:41 PM
Joes Flies with a royal coachman streamer, trout kryptonite.
#3
Non Hunting/Fishing Photos / Re: First Weapon!
Last post by FinsnFur - Yesterday at 06:12:47 PM
Quote from: msmith on Yesterday at 06:05:11 AM4 more and we'd have a giant killer.

Who works for the power company? Looks like a little housekeeping to get rid of some scrap wire is in order lol

He saves that for the copper. Thats how he funds his air gun addiction  :eyebrow:
#4
The Tailgate / Today in history 4-26
Last post by remrogers - Yesterday at 10:25:30 AM
1798
April 26
Mountain man James Beckwourth is born

James Beckwourth, one of only a handful of early mountain men to emerge from the system of slavery, is born in Fredericksburg, Virginia.

The exact year of Beckwourth's birth is in dispute. Some historians suggest it may have been 1800 rather than 1798. The uncertainty arises both from Beckwourth's notorious reputation for exaggerating and rewriting his own history, as well as the humble circumstances of his birth. The child of a white plantation owner and a Black woman who was likely enslaved, Beckwourth was born into a society that paid little notice to children born of Black mothers.

During his childhood, Beckwourth may have been enslaved. However, by the time he reached adulthood in St. Louis, Missouri, his master had apparently manumitted him and he was regarded as a free Black man. In 1824, he joined William Ashley's third and most arduous fur-trapping expedition to the Rocky Mountains. Beckwourth received a crash course in the dangers of mountain life, just barely managing to avoid death by freezing or starvation. Despite the risks, Beckwourth enjoyed being a mountain man, and he spent the next several years as a free trapper.

Trapping in the Powder River country of Wyoming, Beckwourth began to forge a close alliance with the Crow Indians. Sometime between 1826-1828, he abandoned American society altogether and joined the Crow people. The Crow had long been friendly with trappers, and they apparently welcomed Beckwourth into their society. Beckwourth learned the Crow language, customs, and ways of living, and he married at least two Crow women and fathered several children. Beckwourth later claimed that he became a powerful chief among the Crow, though historians have questioned whether this was another of his exaggerations.

In the mid-1830s, Beckwourth left his adopted home with the Crow and joined the Missouri volunteer military force as a scout. He saw action in the Seminole War in Florida, fighting under General Zachary Taylor. Beckwourth left the army in 1840 and spent the next decade wandering around the West, occasionally making some quick cash by stealing horses. Eventually settling near Denver, Colorado, Beckwourth continued to work periodically as a civilian scout for military parties. In this capacity, Beckwourth had a role in the infamous Sand Creek Massacre of 1864, but how much Beckwourth knew about or participated in that inexcusable massacre of Native peoples is still disputed.

Not long after the Sand Creek Massacre, Beckwourth again abandoned Anglo-American society and returned to the Crow tribe. As with his birth, the details of Beckwourth's death are uncertain. Some accounts say he died in 1866 among his adopted people, and they laid him to rest in Crow fashion on a tree platform; others indicate he may have died near Denver in 1867.

#5
Fishing Photos / Re: Fish on!
Last post by msmith - Yesterday at 07:06:50 AM
Quote from: HaMeR on April 25, 2024, 05:21:10 PMI love those Mepps!!

I do too but Joe's are my favorite.
#6
Non Hunting/Fishing Photos / Re: First Weapon!
Last post by msmith - Yesterday at 06:05:11 AM
4 more and we'd have a giant killer.

Who works for the power company? Looks like a little housekeeping to get rid of some scrap wire is in order lol
#7
Fishing Equipment / Re: Look what I found
Last post by FinsnFur - April 25, 2024, 09:51:28 PM
Quote from: HaMeR on April 25, 2024, 05:23:21 PM
Quote from: Hawks Feather on April 22, 2024, 08:20:00 AMYou have a good eye for spotting that one.

Prolly not so hard when he was untangling his own swim bait from the same brush hangin over the water.  :shrug:  :shrug:

 :laf:  :laf:

Shut up Glen :alscalls:  :alscalls: 
Your actually close though :laf:
I was was looking for arrow heads as I walked the shore casting. Mississippi River up here in our little "Driftless Region, holds a TON of Native American Archaeology. Every spring more gets exposed.
#8
Fishing Equipment / Re: Look what I found
Last post by HaMeR - April 25, 2024, 05:23:21 PM
Quote from: Hawks Feather on April 22, 2024, 08:20:00 AMYou have a good eye for spotting that one.

Prolly not so hard when he was untangling his own swim bait from the same brush hangin over the water.  :shrug:  :shrug:

 :laf:  :laf:
#9
Fishing Photos / Re: Fish on!
Last post by HaMeR - April 25, 2024, 05:21:10 PM
I love those Mepps!!
#10
Birds / Re: Spring turkey season in Ke...
Last post by HaMeR - April 25, 2024, 05:15:03 PM
I called in my Nephews 1st bird a few years ago!! He drilled it at 20yds. I was stoked to say the least!!

Nice bird there!! Between the 2 of you youre gonna run em all outta those woods Pat!! Congratulations to the both of you!! :yoyo:  :yoyo: