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Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 15, 2018 9:51 am
by mrwatch
how come every time I move my chair the camp fire smokes follows me? ::shrug:: and skeeters!

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 15, 2018 11:08 am
by TripleF
philco wrote:So what's going to become of that chord of wood ? (Looks perfect for whiskey drinkin' cigar smokin' campfires.)

Oh yes indeedy it is my friend.......it'll be left where it is in the cabin camping area for others to use (like anyone in their right mind
would sleep without AC in Florida, but they do).

Thanks fellas!! ::handshake::

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sat Jun 16, 2018 5:49 am
by ken98k
Steve Warden wrote:Very cool, Ken!
Year 'round, or summer use only?
It'll be a year round cabin. Snowmachine access in the winter.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sat Jun 16, 2018 5:52 am
by philco
ken98k wrote:
Steve Warden wrote:Very cool, Ken!
Year 'round, or summer use only?
It'll be a year round cabin. Snowmachine access in the winter.
Ken you won't give up your current location once the cabin is built will you ?

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sat Jun 16, 2018 5:55 am
by ken98k
philco wrote:
ken98k wrote:
Steve Warden wrote:Very cool, Ken!
Year 'round, or summer use only?
It'll be a year round cabin. Snowmachine access in the winter.
Ken you won't give up your current location once the cabin is built will you ?
I'll have no reason to ever leave!

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sat Jun 16, 2018 11:16 am
by TripleF
ken98k wrote:
philco wrote:
ken98k wrote: It'll be a year round cabin. Snowmachine access in the winter.
Ken you won't give up your current location once the cabin is built will you ?
I'll have no reason to ever leave!
Awesome man.....always wanted to do that......happy for you!!

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sat Jun 16, 2018 4:52 pm
by doglegg
TripleF wrote:
philco wrote:So what's going to become of that chord of wood ? (Looks perfect for whiskey drinkin' cigar smokin' campfires.)

Oh yes indeedy it is my friend.......it'll be left where it is in the cabin camping area for others to use (like anyone in their right mind
would sleep without AC in Florida, but they do).

Thanks fellas!! ::handshake::
Scott, this is your best mission yet. Very impressive how much work those fellows did. You did good.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sun Jun 17, 2018 2:37 am
by Tony_Wood
Had to catch a breather this afternoon just before dark.
Hit a trail on my bike with two goals in mind: 1 find a new plant to make natural cordage, 2 use local sourced material to build a fire by hand drill.

I succeeded at one: new cord plant was a go, hand drill ember was a bust.
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EE28D632-F7A0-42AD-8926-1334F83EBB39.jpeg
8E6D7D1D-B94A-4724-A4D1-7AF290EBDE15.jpeg

A5967DBB-37D3-4651-B85F-4D6386B86369.jpeg
I did find my first ripe blackberries of the season!
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Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sun Jun 17, 2018 10:27 am
by TripleF
doglegg wrote:
TripleF wrote:
philco wrote:So what's going to become of that chord of wood ? (Looks perfect for whiskey drinkin' cigar smokin' campfires.)

Oh yes indeedy it is my friend.......it'll be left where it is in the cabin camping area for others to use (like anyone in their right mind
would sleep without AC in Florida, but they do).

Thanks fellas!! ::handshake::
Scott, this is your best mission yet. Very impressive how much work those fellows did. You did good.

Thanks Floyd!!!

Sooooooooooo cool Tony! ::tu::

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sun Jun 17, 2018 12:40 pm
by Old Hunter
Nice Tony! Did you build the knife - it looks very tough and functional? OH

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sun Jun 17, 2018 2:46 pm
by Dinadan
Tony - getting out and trying stuff is fun even if everything does not succeed. I have never tried making a fire with a drill - I always thought it would be difficult even with exactly the fight kind of wood and tinder. I like that knife: very functional looking. I have one kind of similar that I like for small tasks.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sun Jun 17, 2018 5:33 pm
by Tony_Wood
TripleF wrote:
doglegg wrote:
TripleF wrote:

Oh yes indeedy it is my friend.......it'll be left where it is in the cabin camping area for others to use (like anyone in their right mind
would sleep without AC in Florida, but they do).

Thanks fellas!! ::handshake::
Scott, this is your best mission yet. Very impressive how much work those fellows did. You did good.

Thanks Floyd!!!

Sooooooooooo cool Tony! ::tu::
Scott, keep up the good work with those young men, and thanks.
Old Hunter wrote:Nice Tony! Did you build the knife - it looks very tough and functional? OH
OH, I did build this one. It is about two years old now. 1084 and Jerusalem Olive with g-10 liners. It rides well on my side, and fills the hand well for working.
Dinadan wrote:Tony - getting out and trying stuff is fun even if everything does not succeed. I have never tried making a fire with a drill - I always thought it would be difficult even with exactly the fight kind of wood and tinder. I like that knife: very functional looking. I have one kind of similar that I like for small tasks.
Mel, I have several fire kits that I have put together over the years. Yucca, cedar, cottonwood, etc. Most of the time I can get an ember with a bow drill, but the hand drill is finicky. Especially with resources picked up in the trail side. It stretches out limits, and tests what one can do with what is immediately available. That is the fun part.
Who is the maker of the knife you speak of? Scandi grind?

Thanks.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Sun Jun 17, 2018 6:46 pm
by Dinadan
My little knife (3 1/4" blade) came from Track of the Wolf. https://www.trackofthewolf.com/List/Item.aspx/461/1 I do not know if they actually make the knives.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Mon Jun 18, 2018 10:59 am
by Tony_Wood
Dinadan wrote:My little knife (3 1/4" blade) came from Track of the Wolf. https://www.trackofthewolf.com/List/Item.aspx/461/1 I do not know if they actually make the knives.
That is a nice looking knife, Mel. I have never seen that website and sales company. Thanks for the link.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 1:49 am
by treefarmer
Here is a sad picture for the Outdoorsman Thread:
An electrocuted hawk.
An electrocuted hawk.
We had finished our breakfast and were doing our morning Bible reading when the power went off. Didn't think much of it as it happens pretty often in our neck of the woods. The power went off at 7:30, I called the Electric Coop and they dispatched a service truck, we were the only ones with an outage reported. The service man found the hawk at the base of a transformer pole that powers another well on our place. When the hawk got between the hot leg and a ground, it put a big burn across its chest feathers and tripped the jack out on the dirt road. 9:30 we were back in business.
This is what the hawk got tangled up in:
This transformer provides service for another well.
This transformer provides service for another well.
There are always hawks around our place, I think they may have a nest in a Pine swamp north of the well as they are always circling, hunting and calling in that area.
Treefarmer

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 1:54 am
by doglegg
Used to work on traffic signals and this happened several times in my 15 years. Once one had a rabbit in its talons. Also squirrels and snakes would do the same thing. Always same result.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 2:51 am
by Dinadan
That is a sad photo. Looks like a Sharp Shinned or Cooper's.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 10:10 am
by TripleF
Two of the boys cam oh so close to the Eastern Diamondback on Wed... :shock: :shock:

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 1:17 pm
by Quick Steel
Yikes! Good teaching opportunity though.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 1:24 pm
by jmh58
Hey Garry.. Sharp-shinned or Coopers hawk in tfs post?? I am going with a Sharpie!! ::tu:: John :D

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 1:33 pm
by Dinadan
TripleF wrote:Two of the boys cam oh so close to the Eastern Diamondback on Wed... :shock: :shock:
I love to see one of those in it's natural environment ... but it would be scary if I were riding herd on a group of boys! I bet those boys eyes were big as saucers when you pointed out the snake and told them what it was.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 1:41 pm
by treefarmer
Scott, did you let that one get away? ::poke:: You should have poked him with a stick and made coil up and "sing" for the boys, that's a sound the will run a chill up your spine! I suppose that snake is not quite large enough to have a big set of rattles that would really sound off when agitated. Seriously, I suppose in a park those critters are protected. ::hmm::
Treefarmer

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 2:45 pm
by Dinadan
A few years back I read that kids that are bitten by a venomous snake usually do not see the snake until it bites. The article went on to say that most adults are bitten when they are messing with a venomous snake. I think just observing and leaving it alone is a good message to teach kids.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 2:56 pm
by Quick Steel
Good call John. I think it is a juvenile Sharpie. One thing tho, Treefarmer evidently lives in the Fl. panhandle. According to my range maps that is a bit beyond the summer range of a Sharpie. Coopers would be the more common. Nevertheless, since I think juveniles roam more I'll stick with our call.

Re: Outdoorsman Thread

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2018 3:10 pm
by doglegg
Scott, that is a little scary running on to that particular snake. But part of being out side. Glad the boy are all ok and have sharper eyes now. Good photo as well.