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Prejudiced Hunters

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As hunters, we’ve all probably encountered opposition from non-hunters at one time or another. What’s sad though is when we face opposition from within our own ranks. This type of prejudice is very well what could be our downfall one day. All the anti-hunters have to do is focus on these internal divisions and watch us tear ourselves apart.

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Creating a Hunting Prayer

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Since my post Hunting Prayers and Rituals, I have had a few inquiries from hunters wanting to know where to look for information so they could find prayers to say over their kills. I wish I could say I’m going to give a long list of resources on the web for them to look over, but I’m not. Why? Because they tend to be rather hard to find.

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Hunters’ Hot Tamale Pie

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Hunters’ Hot Tamale Pie

Ingredients:

1½ pounds Ground Venison
1 large Onion, chopped
1 teaspoon Garlic, minced
1 teaspoon Seasoned salt
1 pack Chili seasoning mix
1 pounds Can of tomatoes
1½ cup Cooked whole kernel corn drained
3¼ ounce Can pitted black olives drained
1 cup Yellow cornmeal
1 teaspoon Salt
2½ cup Cold water
¼ cup Chopped canned pimiento
1 cup Shredded cheddar cheese

Directions:

1. Brown ground beef in skillet, breaking up meat with fork. 2. Add seasonings and tomatoes; simmer 5 minutes. 3. Stir in corn and olives. 4. Combine cornmeal, salt and water; cook, stirring, until thick. 5. Add pimento. 6. Line greased, shallow 2-quart baking dish with part of cornmeal mush. 7. Pour in beef mixture and make a border of remaining mush around edge of baking dish. 8. Bake at 350øF about 40 minutes. 9. Sprinkle with remaining cheese and bake 5 minutes longer.

Check for more recipes here.

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Misinformed People

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I know that all vegetarians aren’t automatically against hunting or for PETA type animal rights, but a large majority are. How often do you go to a site dedicated to their lifestyle and find a link to ‘animal rights’ or ‘PETA’? A lot, as is the case with Living Without Meat.

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Subsistence Hunting License?

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I was Googling hunting news this morning in hopes of finding an idea for a post, and I came across an article about changes to Alberta’s subsistence hunting license. Basically, it’s a hunting license issued to anyone in the province that relies upon moose, elk, or deer meat to feed them and their families and can be used anytime during the year. It got me to thinking.

Would the creation of a subsistence hunting license elsewhere help curb the cases of out-of-season poaching? Granted, some poaching isn’t for the meat to feed the poacher and their families. For those people poaching as a means to feed their families, though, it would provide a legal way for them to do so.

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Raw Apple Cake Recipe

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Ok, so this recipe has very little to do with hunting, unless you count hunting for apples, or it being a treat to take on a hunting trip, or…I don’t know how else. I do have a recipe section though, one that has been neglected quite a bit. And, this is one of my favorite cakes my Grandma used to make.

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Oklahoma Iceland

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Like I mentioned in this post, I’m from Oklahoma, where you’re more likely to get ice than snow. If you live anywhere in North America, since I’m in Canada and have, you’ve likely seen on the news that I wasn’t lying about that. If the name wasn’t already taken, Oklahoma would be better known for the moment as Iceland.

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Fishing Like You Hunt?

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Wouldn’t it be so much easier to shoot your line out into the water than having to cast it? Well, that is exactly what you can do with the Rocket Fishing Rod, pictured above. Now you can fish almost exactly like you hunt!

I saw a commercial for it while watching fishing shows with my oldest son over the weekend. While I definitely don’t see it being something for the entire family, I do see the benefit of it for the primary target user…the kids. In fact, being so close to Christmas, and knowing the kids want some fishing gear under the tree, I’m seriously considering this for all three of them.

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Squirrel Hunting

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One of the earliest types of hunting I got to do when I was young was squirrel hunting. In fact, a squirrel was the first animal I ever shot, if memory serves me right. It’s an excellent animal to break in new hunters on, since they are rather plentiful in most areas, and for the most part, not as hard to hunt as other small game.

Being from Oklahoma, I’m more use to seeing gray and fox squirrels. Here in Canada, the vast majority of squirrels I see are black squirrels, which was a rarity back home. I tease my wife, though, and tell her no matter the color, they still look tasty.

See, she finds it a bit strange that I eat squirrels. To be honest, when cleaning them and seeing how much they look like a rat when the skin is off, I find it a bit weird too. I guess for her it is a bit like rednecks and roadkill…it just doesn’t seem right to eat them. But damn are they ever tasty. Oops, I already mentioned that.

It takes a few of them to make a good meal for a family, but well worth it. Especially when you fry them up and serve them with mashed potatoes, gravy, and biscuits. Some really good eating. Come to think of it, I don’t think I have ever had them any other way except for a couple of times that we had them baked.

For those of you who may not know, here is a simple way to fry up a squirrel.

Cut the squirrel up, let it soak in salt water over night. Remove from the salt water, dip it in either milk or cream, roll in flour, and toss it in a skillet with plenty of oil to mostly cover it. Let it cook until golden brown, flip it and repeat the process. Simple, isn’t it? And hard to beat.

I have a few other recipes that can be here if you’re interested in them.

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Hunting and the PC Pendulum

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The pendulum of political correctness is in constant motion and you never know where a word or phrase is going to fall on its varying arc of acceptability.

For years I’ve referred to the killing of deer as harvesting when talking to certain people. It isn’t a term I generally use when talking to close friends or other hunters. On the contrary, it is when talking to those people who I don’t know if they hunt or even what their feelings on hunting may be that I use the word harvest. Otherwise, I say kill or killed.

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The Simplicity of Hunting

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Most modern hunters deny that their embrace of technology has eroded sportsmanship and hunting skills. Curiously, they still see themselves as old-fashioned woodsmen, intimate with their prey and with the outdoors.

But I have the strong suspicion that if one were to ask a high-tech hunter if he had the slightest notion how to track and stalk a whitetail buck, he would slink away in embarrassment.

I read the above statements in an article I found this morning. Nothing like reading others opinions to get the old brain to working, is there? It definitely got me to thinking about how true this is.

Hunting, in it’s simplest form, is something that requires nothing more than skill and a basic understanding of your prey to be successful. In today’s world, it is quickly becoming something that requires a lot of equipment and very little skill. If anything, all that is required is a little bit of luck.

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Cougars and Bears – Oh My!

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I’ve written before about seeing big cats in North-Eastern Oklahoma. But if you ask the normal, every day person, they’ll likely laugh at you or think that you’re crazy. And if you’re brave enough to say that you’ve seen a bear, prepare for an even bigger laugh. But it’s true.

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Snow in the Great White North

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Canada is known as The Great White North for a reason. That reason is snow. And the last couple of days, it has been living up to its nickname. The snow has been coming down steady and everything is turning into a winter wonderland.

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Outdoor bloggers are great

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When I first started this blog, I had a lot of plans for it. Being a writer, I had the same excitement for it as I do when I begin a new story. But, like it is with writing long stories, the excitement starts to fade, it gets harder to keep writing, and you wonder if you should have ever started it in the first place.

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The Politically Incorrect Guide to Hunting

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As I previously mentioned, I’ve been reading ‘The Politically Incorrect Guide to Hunting‘ by Frank Miniter, and I’ve recently finished it. I have to say I am awfully impressed with the amount of facts presented in it. Facts that, like the book says, the media fail to report when they talk about hunting. And they are actual facts, easily verified with little research; not just the opinions of someone who enjoys hunting.

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