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Adjam5
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Everything posted by Adjam5
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Only bad part about reading or typing on the "throne" is that...my legs go numb before I am on the last page of American Rifleman, Shooting Times or Bowhunter magazines:D
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Amazing...Glad he is doing better. Continued prayers.
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If you can keep them in the bulls eye at 40 and less, check out these heads. Clean miss or a kill. http://www.magnusbroadheads.com/bullhead.html
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Very cool:cool: I love non typ's! Wishing you the best in getting that bad boy up on your wall;).
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Yes, my buddy has a Marlin Slugmaster( I believe) bolt gun. Very dang akrit:D with sabots. Most of the bolt scatterguns I have seen, are old ones with fixed chokes and the newer ones are made for slugs.
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Great info Leo. Thanks. I just sent that info off to my buddy, who bought his Bowtech general while he was in the sandbox in Iraq. He took advantage of the great deal Bowtech was offering our soldiers on active duty.
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Will, I believe your arm should be slightly bent, not locked at the elbow. A locked elbow invites torquing the shot with no give. It may be hard for such a big guy to get a properly fit bow. Maybe a visit to the Big and tall bow shop is in order:D. Also, be careful about cranking down screws on the cam(s). Many are aluminum and the screws are steel. That makes for a easy stripping of the threads.
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I am sure you could. Dead deer is dead deer, no matter how you slice it. It is all in the hand of the user;). You know how the OTPG has the theory if it is dead, it is more dead with a Magnum? How can we apply that to bows:D?
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Joe, that is a beautiful print for sure. I like how the arrow personalizes the art;). Good work Gary:). I'm sure with a little time you'd find the lost Arc also:D Joe asked...you delivered.
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You got it Kyle, Hope Gramps gets to feeling better.
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Happy Birthday:)
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You know what Leo?...Now that I think of it...These Axis under that feeder, were about 300 yards off on a huge manicured grassland field. That is until that feeder went off and the dinner bell rang:). I was instructed by my friend who took me to this spot, that we cannot shoot any animals in that field. It was beyond our border, and make sure you don't shoot a whitetail, they were out of season. There was one in the back of the feeder pic. I held out for horns, but all that hung around was a young buck, which we all know are tender;). So in the freezer he went! That is a Red Stag on the floor of the cooler. My Axis in the rear.
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There has to be more to the story than what was printed. Do you honestly think that a company that had its future on the line, would knowingly NOT show up for a case where damages awarded could close the company? I think not. Sad story indeed and NO price can be put on the loss of a loved one. As much as we may hate for a price to be come to for the loss of life, bottom line... That is the way our court system works. It happens everyday. Tort reform is in order.
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Joe, I have this in our family room and every time I look at it; I feel proud. I won it at a Friends of the NRA silent auction last March.
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Get well soon Randy. Crud can't keep a good man down:)
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While CEO salaries are out of control, a 880K perk and salary compensation is not that outrageous for running a 75 billion dollar company. It is a hard pill to swallow with the Gov't and everyone else being in such bad shape financially.
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From a NRA-ILA E mail: Major Victory for American Workers Right to Self-Defense Fairfax, Va. – Yesterday, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled unanimously in support of allowing employees to store legally owned firearms in locked, private motor vehicles while parked in employer parking lots. This decision upholds NRA-backed legislation passed in 2004. “This is a victory for the millions of American workers who have been denied the right to protect themselves while commuting between their homes and their workplace,” said NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre. “This effort was aimed at skirting the will of the American people, and the intent of legislatures across this country while eviscerating Right-to-Carry laws. This ruling is a slap at the corporate elitists who have no regard for the constitutional rights of law abiding American workers." In March 2004, the Oklahoma legislature passed an amendment holding employers criminally liable for prohibiting employees from storing firearms in locked vehicles on company property. A number of corporations subsequently filed suit in opposition to the new laws, alleging they were: unconstitutionally vague; an unconstitutional taking of private property; and preempted by various federal statutes. The lower court ruled in favor of the injunction. “This issue was contrived by the gun control lobby who goaded corporations into doing their dirty work for them,” said Chris W. Cox, NRA chief lobbyist. “However, this ruling is a vindication for every hardworking and lawful man and woman whose basic right to self-defense was taken away on a whim by corporate lawyers. NRA is prepared to defend this right and to ensure the safety of every American worker.” In October 2008, Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry and Attorney General Drew Edmondson appealed to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals the lower court decision to strike down the NRA-backed worker protection laws. Today’s proceedings handed down by Circuit Judges Paul J. Kelly, Bobby R. Baldock, and Michael W. McConnell reversed the lower court’s grant of a permanent injunction.
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These Axis liked corn.
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Cool congrats on the JIB. I think I paid $99 for our JIB direct from FoxPro. Call Mike Dillon(owner) at FoxPro. Tell him about the broken screw. They just might send it to you;). He is a VERY personable guy and stands behind his products. My son and I will be giving our FoxPro a workout and the crows on our land in Sullivan county, a run for their lives tomorrow:D You live close by...maybe we can get together and hunt sometime?
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Bagpipes are very moving, and they can make people quite emotional. Amazing Grace for example. Our union has a band of pipers called the Sword of Light. http://www.swordoflight.com/ They took 1st place at the Dublin millennium in Ireland and are always there to volunteer for members funerals and even happy occurrences. I have seen them play many times over my 23 years in the local. They are wonderful sounding band and I have a few friends who are in it also. Good Luck learning the pipes Danny boy:D! Learning how to play music is a good thing.
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You did pretty dang good Ruth...Congrats! Keep up the good work.
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My 1st bow was a Bear whitetail hunter back in 1989. Plastic wheels and big heavy limbs, painted brass pins for sights! I still have it! I shot my 1st 3 deer with it using HUGE telephone pole sized aluminum arrows too:D. My how far we have come. Fred Bear was a pioneer in bow tech from the very beginning.
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Sad sight for sure. Outdoors people feel that insult more than anyone:(. Remember the commercial ways back with the Indian crying? Some have never got that message:mad: