Outdoorsman Thread
- Quick Steel
- Posts: 18339
- Joined: Thu Dec 16, 2010 5:39 pm
- Location: Lebanon, KY
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
A nicely observed variety of animals Scott.
Eustace, looks like you have the makings of a tasty meal there.
Eustace, looks like you have the makings of a tasty meal there.
- Eustace
- Posts: 1221
- Joined: Sun Aug 20, 2017 6:26 am
- Location: Bulgaria
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
We threw a sea basses on the grill, it's great, but the horse mackerels are not very tasty and I released them.Quick Steel wrote:
Eustace, looks like you have the makings of a tasty meal there.
- TripleF
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 19584
- Joined: Mon Feb 14, 2011 3:42 pm
- Location: West Central FL
- Contact:
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Thankfully the boys didn't get stung....I was flailing my arms and yelling...GET IN THE CAR!! GET IN THE CAR!!
I was scared!
I was scared!
SCOTT
https://www.allaboutpocketknives.com/catalog/triplef
Colonial Knife Company History ebook:
https://gumroad.com/l/ZLDb
Blog: https://scottrauberoutdoors.wordpress.c ... e-26-2026/
https://www.allaboutpocketknives.com/catalog/triplef
Colonial Knife Company History ebook:
https://gumroad.com/l/ZLDb
Blog: https://scottrauberoutdoors.wordpress.c ... e-26-2026/
- Quick Steel
- Posts: 18339
- Joined: Thu Dec 16, 2010 5:39 pm
- Location: Lebanon, KY
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Scott, I don't know if you will consider this a worthwhile idea but.....you might carry some baking soda with you in the car when doing missions. A little baking soda plus a few drops of water on a fingertip makes a simple paste to be applied on any wasp or bee stings. Stops the pain instantly as the poison is immediately alkalized by the soda.
- TripleF
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 19584
- Joined: Mon Feb 14, 2011 3:42 pm
- Location: West Central FL
- Contact:
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Will do. Thanks Garry!!Quick Steel wrote:Scott, I don't know if you will consider this a worthwhile idea but.....you might carry some baking soda with you in the car when doing missions. A little baking soda plus a few drops of water on a fingertip makes a simple paste to be applied on any wasp or bee stings. Stops the pain instantly as the poison is immediately alkalized by the soda.
SCOTT
https://www.allaboutpocketknives.com/catalog/triplef
Colonial Knife Company History ebook:
https://gumroad.com/l/ZLDb
Blog: https://scottrauberoutdoors.wordpress.c ... e-26-2026/
https://www.allaboutpocketknives.com/catalog/triplef
Colonial Knife Company History ebook:
https://gumroad.com/l/ZLDb
Blog: https://scottrauberoutdoors.wordpress.c ... e-26-2026/
- Dinadan
- Silver Tier

- Posts: 3627
- Joined: Sat Dec 29, 2012 2:34 am
- Location: Coastal Alabama
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Nice Mackerel, Eustace.
Scott - I hate wasps! Nine stings is a lot. Maybe twice in my life I have had that many, from yellow jackets. I developed a very fast reaction speed when I felt or spotted the first yellow jacket. One man I worked with said he had never seen anyone move as fast as I did when we stirred up yellow jackets. A few weeks ago I happened to shake a small cedar tree in my back yard. Wasps came flying out, but fortunately I was not stung. The little cedar did not seem like a good place for a nest, anymore than a palmetto, but I guess the wasps felt differently.
Scott - I hate wasps! Nine stings is a lot. Maybe twice in my life I have had that many, from yellow jackets. I developed a very fast reaction speed when I felt or spotted the first yellow jacket. One man I worked with said he had never seen anyone move as fast as I did when we stirred up yellow jackets. A few weeks ago I happened to shake a small cedar tree in my back yard. Wasps came flying out, but fortunately I was not stung. The little cedar did not seem like a good place for a nest, anymore than a palmetto, but I guess the wasps felt differently.
Mel
- treefarmer
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 15123
- Joined: Sun Oct 04, 2009 6:53 am
- Location: Florida Panhandle(LA-Lower Alabama)
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Just a comment on the wasp and the palmettos and cabbage palms (Sabal palm). The fronds will provide a perfectly dry place for a wasp nest, we always were careful around the palm and palmetto fronds that hung down. The early settlers used the fronds as roofing material just as the natives who were here before them.
Concerning the bites or stings, Miss Joy said here grandfather would put a wad of chewing tobacco on their bites when she was a little girl! He's the same one that dipped them a drink of water from the creek with his old Stetson when they got thirsty in the woods.
He must have been a good baby sitter, she and her sisters are still alive!
Treefarmer
Concerning the bites or stings, Miss Joy said here grandfather would put a wad of chewing tobacco on their bites when she was a little girl! He's the same one that dipped them a drink of water from the creek with his old Stetson when they got thirsty in the woods.
Treefarmer
A GUN IN THE HAND IS BETTER THAN A COP ON THE PHONE.
-
doglegg
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 23870
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 2:35 am
- Location: Grand Prairie, Texas
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Eustace, you did good.

Scott like your animal pics and hate the wasp. Glad the boys escaped. I've had uncles who when I was a boy put a big chew of tobacco on my stings. I don't remember that they helped.
Scott like your animal pics and hate the wasp. Glad the boys escaped. I've had uncles who when I was a boy put a big chew of tobacco on my stings. I don't remember that they helped.
- Old Hunter
- Posts: 8409
- Joined: Mon Sep 19, 2011 12:14 am
- Location: Beaufort County, NC
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Eustace, those look a lot like Bluefish.
Scott, good mission, those wasp stings are tough! Between the chewing tobacco and the baking soda the home remedies are all covered. Of course my Dad always said a jigger of bourbon was good for whatever ails you (dog bites, bee stings, colds, etc.) Have to wait until you get home for that remedy! OH
Scott, good mission, those wasp stings are tough! Between the chewing tobacco and the baking soda the home remedies are all covered. Of course my Dad always said a jigger of bourbon was good for whatever ails you (dog bites, bee stings, colds, etc.) Have to wait until you get home for that remedy! OH
Deep in the guts of most men is buried the involuntary response to the hunter's horn, a prickle of the nape hairs, an acceleration of the pulse, an atavistic memory of his fathers, who killed first with stone, and then with club...Robert Ruark
- garddogg56
- Bronze Tier

- Posts: 9871
- Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2011 2:18 am
- Location: Maine Aya up North
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Nice pic boys
I just got back from camp in the western mountains of Maine . Sure going to hate work tomorrow did a lot of time exploring on these two 4x4's
"On the Road Again"Willie Nelson
- Doc B
- Posts: 3700
- Joined: Fri Aug 10, 2018 10:57 pm
- Location: San Antonio
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
We need to see some pictures...from the exploring!garddogg56 wrote:Nice pic boysI just got back from camp in the western mountains of Maine . Sure going to hate work tomorrow did a lot of time exploring on these two 4x4's
Heretical Refurb / Mods of cheap old folders, since late 2018
- treefarmer
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 15123
- Joined: Sun Oct 04, 2009 6:53 am
- Location: Florida Panhandle(LA-Lower Alabama)
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Wonder who is being nosy?
Treefarmer
A GUN IN THE HAND IS BETTER THAN A COP ON THE PHONE.
-
doglegg
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 23870
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 2:35 am
- Location: Grand Prairie, Texas
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
They don't miss anything Philip. 
- big monk
- Bronze Tier

- Posts: 5718
- Joined: Thu Feb 18, 2010 1:53 am
- Location: Ninety Six,South Carolina
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
A few from lately
______________caught a couple of raccoons this week-in and some of the bucks, are starting to put on some mass** I am really enjoying the cameras this summer -- have a great day,my friends__Monk 
I'm not young enough,____to know everything !!!!!!!!!!!!
MONK****
MONK****
-
doglegg
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 23870
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 2:35 am
- Location: Grand Prairie, Texas
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Enjoy your pics big monk. 
- Dinadan
- Silver Tier

- Posts: 3627
- Joined: Sat Dec 29, 2012 2:34 am
- Location: Coastal Alabama
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Treefarmer - it took me a moment to spot the nosy critter! Cool photo!
Monk - I like the deer, raccoon, squirrel and dove photos. My favorite animal? The Eyes!
Monk - I like the deer, raccoon, squirrel and dove photos. My favorite animal? The Eyes!
Mel
-
doglegg
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 23870
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2017 2:35 am
- Location: Grand Prairie, Texas
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Mel, the eyes have it. 
- TripleF
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 19584
- Joined: Mon Feb 14, 2011 3:42 pm
- Location: West Central FL
- Contact:
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Dinadan wrote:Treefarmer - it took me a moment to spot the nosy critter! Cool photo!
Monk - I like the deer, raccoon, squirrel and dove photos. My favorite animal? The Eyes!
That's got to be BIGFOOT in the back....it just has to be!!
SCOTT
https://www.allaboutpocketknives.com/catalog/triplef
Colonial Knife Company History ebook:
https://gumroad.com/l/ZLDb
Blog: https://scottrauberoutdoors.wordpress.c ... e-26-2026/
https://www.allaboutpocketknives.com/catalog/triplef
Colonial Knife Company History ebook:
https://gumroad.com/l/ZLDb
Blog: https://scottrauberoutdoors.wordpress.c ... e-26-2026/
- dlr110
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 6448
- Joined: Sat Nov 05, 2016 4:24 am
- Location: Ponder, Texas
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
This was on my son's property a couple of days ago.
David Roberts
U.S. Navy and D/FW International Airport Board Retired
Prayer Changes Everything
U.S. Navy and D/FW International Airport Board Retired
Prayer Changes Everything
- treefarmer
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 15123
- Joined: Sun Oct 04, 2009 6:53 am
- Location: Florida Panhandle(LA-Lower Alabama)
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Those fellers don't appear to be real old. When do they start shedding the velvet there in Texas? Pictures like this make me feel young again.
Treefarmer
A GUN IN THE HAND IS BETTER THAN A COP ON THE PHONE.
- dlr110
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 6448
- Joined: Sat Nov 05, 2016 4:24 am
- Location: Ponder, Texas
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
I don't know I not a hunter. My son is and when he bought his land out in Northern Wise County the first thing he did on the back of his property is set up a feeder and a camera. The house is built now and from his back porch he can see down there with a scope, but he also has a blind set up much closer.treefarmer wrote:![]()
Those fellers don't appear to be real old. When do they start shedding the velvet there in Texas? Pictures like this make me feel young again.![]()
Treefarmer
David Roberts
U.S. Navy and D/FW International Airport Board Retired
Prayer Changes Everything
U.S. Navy and D/FW International Airport Board Retired
Prayer Changes Everything
- Old Hunter
- Posts: 8409
- Joined: Mon Sep 19, 2011 12:14 am
- Location: Beaufort County, NC
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
Loving all the pre-season, velvet photos gents! OH
Deep in the guts of most men is buried the involuntary response to the hunter's horn, a prickle of the nape hairs, an acceleration of the pulse, an atavistic memory of his fathers, who killed first with stone, and then with club...Robert Ruark
- Quick Steel
- Posts: 18339
- Joined: Thu Dec 16, 2010 5:39 pm
- Location: Lebanon, KY
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
I agree with Scott that Dinadin captured either Bigfoot or Charlie [Sasquatch].
- muskratt
- Posts: 62
- Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2011 2:56 am
- Location: northeast ohio
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
[attachment=0]WP_20150711_001.jpg[/attachments
Here's a nice little haul. Great taste.

Here's a nice little haul. Great taste.
- bighomer
- Gold Tier

- Posts: 10764
- Joined: Sat Feb 28, 2015 11:07 pm
- Location: N.mid.Tn.
Re: Outdoorsman Thread
It ain't the great outdoors just my back yard. Momma coon came by with 5 little ones, then mister or mrs.polecat came to check things out. Poor photos but it was almost dark