Beemaster's International Beekeeping Forum

ALMOST BEEKEEPING - RELATED TOPICS => OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES FORUM => Topic started by: AustinB on January 30, 2023, 11:22:49 am

Title: Greenheads
Post by: AustinB on January 30, 2023, 11:22:49 am
With the busy schedule still managed to take my middle son out and fill a limit of greenheads before the 2022 season closed.
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: Ben Framed on January 30, 2023, 11:26:58 am
Family time! Looks like it will be duck poppers soon! Yum! Good pictures Austin...

Phillip
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: AustinB on January 30, 2023, 12:03:01 pm
Family time! Looks like it will be duck poppers soon! Yum! Good pictures Austin

Yes sir, hunting makes for some great time with the kids. Thanks Phillip
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: The15thMember on January 30, 2023, 12:10:07 pm
Awesome!  Good to see the kids getting out there and having a great time!
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: Michael Bush on January 30, 2023, 01:00:44 pm
When they do polls on how people feel about hunting almost 100% are in favor of indigenous people hunting.  Well, all my ancestors (some of which were American Indians and most of which were Europeans) back as far as I can trace were hunters.  I'd say hunting is traditional for most people who are hunters.  They learned it from their parents who learned from theirs, etc.  My Grandfather was an engineer on the railroad and the family got to ride for free.  My dad and his brother would get on the train in Oklahoma and ride it up to Kansas to hunt pheasants and quail.  They would ride carrying their shotguns in their laps and ride back with dead birds hanging from their hunting vests.
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: AustinB on January 30, 2023, 01:50:26 pm
Awesome!  Good to see the kids getting out there and having a great time!
Its all they want to do  :grin:
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: BeeMaster2 on January 31, 2023, 08:23:07 pm
Michael,
If you tried doing that today you would get arrested.
Boys here in Baker County would have guns in their trucks at school and go hunting right after school. Today they would definitely go to jail.
Friends from Bell South talked about putting their shotguns on their work trucks and would go target shooting during lunch. A few years before I retired Bell South security officers went into a workshop and asked for 2 employees, then searched their vehicles and found weapons and fired those two employees. The supervisor was shocked and said it was ridiculous and said they all carried them in their vehicles, he said even I have one. They fired the everyone in that workshop. About 2 years later Florida made it illegal to search or ask if we have weapons in our vehicles at work.
Jim Altmiller
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: Ben Framed on January 31, 2023, 09:47:11 pm
I personally have vivid clear memories enamored in times past, spent hunting and fishing with family and friends.. Keep filling the priceless pages of close fellowship and lasting memories progressing forward Austin; And thanks for the pictures. These youngsters look like they are having a good time 'all around' !!  Such smiles are priceless!!
:grin: thumbs up!

Phillip
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: Michael Bush on February 01, 2023, 07:14:20 am
In Western Nebraska when I was in High School every kid had a shotgun in his car or truck so they could go pheasant or duck hunting on their way home.  When my kids went to school in Laramie every kid had a buck knife on his belt.  In sixth grade they did "hunter safety" and they all shot guns.  I was at the gun store a week or two ago and someone was picking up skeet and shotgun shells for the local high school skeet club.

I was working in Illinois building a church between jobs in Western Nebraska, so I stayed with my Dad.  We were on a coffee break and these guys were discussing the "last time they got mugged".  Having never been mugged this was very strange to me.  Then one of them talked about someone they knew who actually owned a gun.  I started laughing.  They looked at me and said, "I suppose you have a gun rack in you pickup".  I said I didn't know any carpenters who didn't.  Usually one place on it was used for the four foot level, but the rest were full of guns.  A typical job site in Western Nebraska, the guns outnumbered carpenters at least three to one and typically four or five to one.  That's just the ones they had in their truck.  There was usually a shotgun (ducks, geese and pheasants), a .22 (squirrels and rabbits), a coyote  gun (Coyote skins were going for over $100 a piece at the time) and a pistol for self defense (.44 or .357) either in the glove box or under the seat when parked and on the dash when not (concealed was illegal).  Possibly another pistol for plinking (.22).
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: AustinB on February 01, 2023, 09:21:52 am
I personally have vivid clear memories enamored in times past, spent hunting and fishing with family and friends.. Keep filling the priceless pages of close fellowship and lasting memories progressing forward Austin; And thanks for the pictures. These youngsters look like they are having a good time 'all around' !!  Such smiles are priceless!!
:grin: thumbs up!

So do I, such great memories from my childhood have stayed with me into my adult life and I want to make sure my kids have a chance to experience the same.
Title: Re: Greenheads
Post by: AustinB on February 01, 2023, 09:26:15 am
In Western Nebraska when I was in High School every kid had a shotgun in his car or truck so they could go pheasant or duck hunting on their way home.  When my kids went to school in Laramie every kid had a buck knife on his belt.  In sixth grade they did "hunter safety" and they all shot guns.  I was at the gun store a week or two ago and someone was picking up skeet and shotgun shells for the local high school skeet club.

I was working in Illinois building a church between jobs in Western Nebraska, so I stayed with my Dad.  We were on a coffee break and these guys were discussing the "last time they got mugged".  Having never been mugged this was very strange to me.  Then one of them talked about someone they knew who actually owned a gun.  I started laughing.  They looked at me and said, "I suppose you have a gun rack in you pickup".  I said I didn't know any carpenters who didn't.  Usually one place on it was used for the four foot level, but the rest were full of guns.  A typical job site in Western Nebraska, the guns outnumbered carpenters at least three to one and typically four or five to one.  That's just the ones they had in their truck.  There was usually a shotgun (ducks, geese and pheasants), a .22 (squirrels and rabbits), a coyote  gun (Coyote skins were going for over $100 a piece at the time) and a pistol for self defense (.44 or .357) either in the glove box or under the seat when parked and on the dash when not (concealed was illegal).  Possibly another pistol for plinking (.22).

My dad talks about the days when all the boys came to school with their shotguns in their trucks and went hunting everyday after. No ne was ever threatened or shot, just a bunch of young guys enjoying the outdoors. Maybe we need more of that these days. I remember the boys in highschool used to bring their bows and go bowhunting after school in early season. Half of them probably had their rifles in the truck during firearm season too, just never said anything; times have really changed. I'm a licensed CC, but with my work I have to be very careful where I travel with my handguns.