Maggie's FarmWe are a commune of inquiring, skeptical, politically centrist, capitalist, anglophile, traditionalist New England Yankee humans, humanoids, and animals with many interests beyond and above politics. Each of us has had a high-school education (or GED), but all had ADD so didn't pay attention very well, especially the dogs. Each one of us does "try my best to be just like I am," and none of us enjoys working for others, including for Maggie, from whom we receive neither a nickel nor a dime. Freedom from nags, cranks, government, do-gooders, control-freaks and idiots is all that we ask for. |
Our Recent Essays Behind the Front Page
Categories
QuicksearchLinks
Blog Administration |
Sunday, January 26. 2014Winter in New England #7: Hand and Foot WarmersWhen sitting in a duck blind or deer stand, standing on a ski slope watching your grandkids, and winter hiking, it's much more pleasant to have warm toes and fingers. I have had times in duck blinds when my fingers were too cold and numb to pull a trigger, but I have a touch of Raynaud's Syndrome. Assuming that you wear things to keep toes and hands dry, hand and foot warmers can add plenty of comfort. This site has aluminum-coated insoles and insoles ("footbeds") with inserts for 6-hour warmers. They also sell Grabber Hand Warmers for your gloves - or for your pocket. Saturday, December 7. 2013Thanks, pal
Thanks for a good, fatiguing day in the field and plenty of good talk about serious matters. Glad I had the chance to test out my Grandpa's 16 ga. A-5. It seems to shoot straight. Heavy, though, after a few hours. This is how we roll in Yankeeland: By the way, I know our readers always wondered what Woodcock "chalk" looks like. It's like a white splash on the fallen leaves. You have seen it in the woods, if observant. I took a photo:
Posted by Bird Dog
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
at
16:44
| Comment (1)
| Trackbacks (0)
Wednesday, November 20. 2013A free ad for our hunting friends on Chincoteague
Here's what they emailed me: We have plenty of space if you would like to go on a duck goose combo hunt. We get ducks and geese in the same blinds on the marshes we hunt. It is $190 (plus $10 tax) per full day per hunter. We hunt all day and meet you at 5:15 am and hunt till sunset. We can come in for a lunch break or a break at anytime during the day or we can bring you lunch from a local restaurant if you want. We have many nice duck blinds, most all have roofs, we have all the decoys, you will be in your own blind & dogs are welcome. Hotels are listed on our website and off season rates are about $55 a night. Just bring your gun, ammo, boots and lic. You can get your license by calling 866-721-6911, it is easy and immediate over the phone, you get your lic, hip number and state stamp, just get the federal stamp at the post office, you can also get a 3 day out of state lic. for about $40, be sure to sign your state and federal duck stamps. You will love this place, we get a large variety of waterfowl: black ducks, mallards, teal, shovelers, brant, pintails, wigeon, gadwall, a bunch of other ducks plus Canada and snow geese. Thursday, November 7. 2013Woodcock Shooting - and eatingHunting Woodcock, which we usually do in conjunction with hunting Ruffed Grouse, is an interesting and challenging sport. They tend to fly in a spiral, and many of us have a moment of remorse when we take one of these lovely little tasty birds from the dog. The dog is needed not so much to flush them or point them as to find them when shot. Their camo is perfect. Always make a sauce for them by sauteeing all of their innards and guts in butter and shallots, and shmooshing them up with a fork with a little brandy and pepper. There's no mess in there, because they conveniently flush out their GI track when they flush. Readers know that the best Woodcock recipe is Woodcock Ravioli in a splash of gibier sauce and shaved black truffle on top. Currier and Ives' Woodcock Shooting:
Posted by Bird Dog
in Food and Drink, Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
at
15:00
| Comments (8)
| Trackbacks (0)
Sunday, October 13. 2013Dawn Snow Geese, ManitobaIf you're set up in the right barley or hay field before 5 am, the Snows will come noisily fluttering into your decoys like this. Hot barrels. Great fun. You get up at O dark 30, grab a coffee, a Marlboro, an apple and a banana and a handful of granola bars, then drive a while down gravel roads and through vast farm fields and set up early in the chilly field in the dark with the aid of headlights and headlamps. Then you drive the trucks out of the field and hide them behind a distant tree row. Unlike Canadas with their tough plumage and rugged build, Snows are easily killed. As it is said, "They go down like a prom dress."
Posted by Gwynnie
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
at
05:21
| Comments (4)
| Trackbacks (0)
Friday, October 11. 2013A good day of hunting and shootingThe view at sunset with the “second half” held firmly in one hand, a Montecristo #4 in the other. Lord Dundee, who drank his whiskey by the tumblerful, once said, ''A single Scotch is nothing more than a dirty glass.'' We love single malts and single cask single malts, but, for regular drinking, Famous Grouse is the favorite.
Posted by Gwynnie
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
at
23:35
| Comments (4)
| Trackbacks (0)
Sunday, September 15. 2013Restoring trout streams
Up in Montana, a group of restorationists is bringing the fishing holes to you. Free rivers, with beavers. h/t, American Digest
Posted by The Barrister
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc.
at
13:02
| Comments (3)
| Trackbacks (0)
Sunday, September 1. 2013Sus scrofa: Hunting and Dining on Wild PigFeral pig, Wild Boar, Wild Hog, Russian Boar, farm pig. They are all pigs, all very slight variants of the one species Sus scrofa. (The tusks are removed from farm pigs at birth.) In the US, they are all called "pigs." No sus scrofa is native to North America. We have posted in the past about the pig/boar hybrids which have been expanding their range across the US, wreaking havoc in the process to woodlands and to agriculture. They are so prolific, and so destructive, that most areas of the US now have open season on the pigs. Hog wild: Feral pig population explodes in U.S Distinguishing European (aka Russian) Boar from farm pig/boar hybrids is almost impossible, but it is thought that, in many or most areas, most animals are hybrid. Since they're all the same species, it doesn't really matter. Pigs. Texas and California have seen enormous population growth of Sus, but they have spread around the country - even around Albany NY where the biggest pigs have traditionally been the NYS politicians. Since every area in the US in which they have appeared is eager to be rid of them, year-round hunting opportunities are abundant. Hunting over bait stations is entirely legal. Some use AR-15s, some use bow, some use revolver, and some macho dudes use baying dogs and kill the pigs with a hunting knife. There are simply not enough pig hunters to control these creatures, so I propose releasing Wolves into areas where the wild pigs are a problem. The Wolves would have a field day. Some people do not enjoy the taste of wild pig, which is a bit gamier than the corn-fed farm pig. I have had the wild boar, the same Sus scrofa, which lives in the Appenines of Umbria, and it is a special treat when cooked the ways the Umbrians do it. "Cinghiale." I've had it there cooked several ways, and the sausage too. Even snuck some cinghiale salumi home in my bags. Here's Pigging out in Umbria Here's a number of Italian recipes for wild boar/pig/whatever, to perhaps inspire our American pig hunters. Here's a pic of my pal (on the right) with a Texas pig he Saturday, August 31. 2013Dog Bars and Restaurants in NYCThere are pubs and restaurants in New York which welcome dogs. Here are just a few. You can google and find plenty more. Saturday, August 24. 2013This morning's huntDeer season is open at my friend's ranch in California.
Saturday, August 3. 2013A nice little surprise - A 16 ga.While in process of cleaning out my parents' house, we discovered where Dad had stashed the shotguns. This nice surprise, among other well-used field guns, had been one of my Grandpa's. It's not as if I needed more shotguns, but this is a 16 ga., which is a good thing. You know what this is. Remington built this one. It's a fairly heavy SOB. I don't think I have used it since I was 15. The bore is clean as a whistle. I will clean 'er up and use it again for both sentimental and practical reasons.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
at
04:34
| Comments (9)
| Trackbacks (0)
Sunday, June 9. 2013Long Island Sound (and Long Island) Stripers This is re-posted from a couple of Aprils ago - Here come the stripers. Not the strippers. It's the end of April, the Bluefish are beginning to show up and the Spring Spawn stripers cannot be far behind. East Coast stripers (called Rockfish on the Left Coast) are an anadromous fish meaning that they spawn in fresh water, but live their adult lives in salt. There are four breeding stocks on the East Coast - Chesapeake Bay, Delaware River, Hudson River and Cape Cod. These four main schools provide most of the striper population along the East coast. Recently, there has been some investigation about the Thames River (New London and Norwich, CT) over winter school being an addition feeder school to the Cape Cod stock. It is not unknown for the Thames River school to reach tremendous populations over winter and spawning up the Thames into the Yantic and Shetucket Rivers in the Spring. Striper fishing is one of my passions - fresh water impounds down south or inshore in New England, stripers provide me with the best and the most honest type of fishing. I say honest because striper fishing isn't a case of chasing down a fierce predator like any of the bill fish or tuna. Stripers are basically lazy and thus require patience and knowledge of the bottom structure to obtain the best size. A few of my favorite spots and techniques are below the fold - Continue reading "Long Island Sound (and Long Island) Stripers"
Posted by Capt. Tom Francis
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
at
09:15
| Comments (16)
| Trackback (1)
Saturday, May 18. 2013Hummingbirds vid One of the things the Intelligent Design people like to pull out is that evolution wasn't smart enough to invent the eye. It was, however, apparently smart enough to design a three-dimensional gyroscope. Like all birds, watch how still their heads are, no matter what gyrations their bodies are going through. Their tail feathers also perform an interesting role. Notice how it's almost like the birds are hinged on a rod running through their wings and the tail feathers act as a 'tilting' mechanism. One quick flap and they tilt up or down on the axis running through their wings. Truly a marvelous animal. Take it away, slo-mo!
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc.
at
12:00
| Comments (8)
| Trackbacks (0)
Monday, April 15. 2013Transporting firearmsI have always figured that we are free to transport firearms from state to state. In the Northeast, it may be getting more complicated. My friends and I shoot and hunt in upstate New York often, and have NYS hunt licenses. I assume we're allowed to own our firearms and to transport them. But are we? Nobody wants to become a felon just because the laws are too complicated to understand, but maybe that's the point. In Massachusetts, a permit to possess firearms is required. I have one. But with the new CT laws, I am confused. Can I transport a firearm through CT from MA to New York? I know that I can take a firearm to the airports in NYC because we have done that many times and it's no big deal (provided they are in locked cases). Among other firearm topics, Kopel considers firearms transport laws at Volokh.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc.
at
12:39
| Comments (4)
| Trackback (1)
Sunday, April 7. 2013Hunting PoodleNo surprise here. Poodles originated in Germany as duck retrievers for marshes, with the haircut designed to reduce ice build-up. In recent years, some breeders have been selecting them again for hunt instinct instead of show-dog features. I always say about training poodles (as someone who has trained Labs and Standard Poodles) that the difficulty with Poodles is that they are smarter than people. Labs just want to please you, but Poodles are always looking to negotiate a compromise. To stay healthy, breeders and vets say Standards need a one-hour off-leash run daily. So does the owner. Another interesting thing about Poodles: they are not into food. They just eat what they need and leave the rest. Nobody has ever seen a fat Poodle. Many humans could take a tip from that, too.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
at
16:28
| Comments (8)
| Trackbacks (0)
Thursday, March 28. 2013Snowy Oaks QuirrinHunting buddy emailed me a pic of his new Large Munsterlander pup, of the above name (born in Minnesota). Pup needs a real handle. Saturday, March 23. 2013Almost Golf Season. Time To Brush Up With A Few Tips
And don't forget to keep your head down. Especially if I'm in the foursome behind you.
Posted by Roger de Hauteville
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc.
at
18:19
| Comments (5)
| Trackbacks (0)
Saturday, February 16. 2013Got Game? The best game sauce recipe in the worldThis is an annual re-post. We'll post more game recipes over the next few weeks to help our hunters with their bursting freezers - With hunting season winding, it's time to get cooking what we have in the freezer. It all begins with the sauce: Uncle Bill's Jus de Gibier (mixed game) sauce, aka Brown Game Stock, aka Clean out the Freezer Sauce Technically, it's a jus, not a sauce. Add a little roux and it will become a sauce. This will be the tastiest sauce base you have ever had in your life, for chicken, game birds, turkey, venison, pork, veal, pasta, ravioli, etc. It's an ideal base for pheasant, chicken, venison or goose bourguignon. It has an earthy richness to it which is remarkable. We like to make a woodcock ravioli with black truffle, and this sauce is essential for that. Gibier refers to mixed game, but we do it with mixed meat too, but not beef, which would overpower the subtler flavors. It is the best use of freezer-burned game and other stuff in the freezer. It's fun to make (but it takes a while), and you can clean out the freezer and the fridge at the same time. I freeze the used carcasses of Thanksgiving turkey, ducks, goose, random deer bones, etc. to use when I make this, once or twice a year, along with freezer-burned chicken, pheasant, etc. You could do this with entirely store-bought stuff if you lack a hunter in the family. The more stuff, the better. You need a 10-12 (or larger) quart pot to make this, if you have a lot of stuff to use, but it freezes fine when made. It's good for a few months, at least. Bake in oven until browned (not necessarily cooked-though) your saved carcasses and freezer-burned game meat and meat, especially pork and pork bones are good, and veal bones, (even if they have already been cooked). Yes, you bake the bones too. Do not burn them in the oven. I tend to use freezer-burned venison, pork chops, all my game bird carcasses, venison bones (cracked with a mallet), a bunch of veal bones and veal scraps if I can get them nowadays (it doesn't hurt to hit up the butcher for some stuff for this), turkey carcass, woodcock carcasses, and a pile of chicken wings. Chop this stuff roughly with a cleaver into 3-6" chunks and toss in the pot. Try to crack the bones. Continue reading "Got Game? The best game sauce recipe in the world"
Posted by Bird Dog
in Food and Drink, Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
at
15:04
| Comments (20)
| Trackback (1)
Friday, January 18. 2013Fishing in CaboWe went after the eating fish (Spanish Mackeral), not the big game fish. More practical. It's like a zoo. With the Humpback Whales all around peering at your boat, the Frigatebirds stealing your bait, and the Sea Lions stealing either your bait or your catch, it was a bit of an obstacle course. But how bad is that? When you go, make sure to sup at our friend Roberto's shrimp joint, and at Mi Casa for traditional Mexican food and jollity. Good fun. To cook the fish you catch, bring them to Solomon's Landing and ask them to make some wonderful dishes with it for suppertime. They will amaze you.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays, Travelogues and Travel Ideas
at
05:05
| Comments (7)
| Trackbacks (0)
Wednesday, January 16. 2013Weds. morning linksMore city co-eds turning to sugar daddies for school support Matchmaking, Beijing-Style Top ten trends to watch in finance for 2013: No. 1 is the ‘revenge of John Bogle’ and the ‘ETFication’ of investing Nerf toy causes lockdown at Long Island school Want to Preserve Your Children’s Future? Slow the Growth of Welfare Spending Santelli Rips the Keynesians: “The Answer Is Always More Money” Byron York: Once a critic of deficits, Obama now goes for broke Facts have been slim in the President’s rhetoric on the debt ceiling Everyone Agrees it's a Problem and Something Must Be Done There is no question that liberals do an impressive job of expressing concern for blacks. But do the intentions expressed in their words match the actual consequences of their deeds? Colin Powell's Double Standard Profiting on Disaster: NJ Senate Votes To Exclude Non-Union Construction Workers For Hurricane Sandy Work French Tax Hell - The country’s taxes are stifling enough without President Hollande’s confiscatory proposals. France taxes your assets, income, and has a VAT UN’s $5.7B anti-poverty agency doesn’t do much to reduce poverty, according to its own assessment The "Victimology" Subterfuge in Islam The Game of Thrones in North Africa Selection of Israel-Bashing CSU Prof a 'Clerical Error'? Al-Dura and the tragic legacy of lethal journalism Saturday, December 22. 2012Why the nasty-looking AR-15 is so popularIt is no "assault weapon." "AR" means Armalite Rifle, not assault rifle. It's good for target shooting and for small game and critters like coyotes and groundhogs. Some consider it a lady's rifle, but might best be termed "gender-neutral." It is easily customizable. Very popular rifle. I think what most people understand the term "assault rifle" to imply is an automatic rifle, like a Tommy Gun or an AK-47. In the NYT: The press seems usually not to to get that the vast majority of firearms are "semi-automatic." As we have mentioned here, a cowboy six-shooter is semi-automatic. As Rudy Guiliani said yesterday, a would-be killer can kill with anything no matter what it looks like. Killers in the US generally use 9 mm. handguns.
This is interesting: The results of the Gun Free School Zone act’s passage have been devastating. OK, the photos. On top is a Remington semi-auto 30.06, below is an AR-15 semi-auto. Which looks scarier?
Thursday, December 20. 2012The Secret History of GunsWell, I think the Heller case sort of settled it. As I say, the only problem is criminals with illegal guns. America doesn't have too many guns, it has too many crims. When we figure out how to effectively control criminals and the violent insane... Here's my proposal: First, the government removes all illegal weapons from all of the criminals and from the violent insane. This would require a major, nation-wide undertaking. Second step, as a sign of faith in their effort, the government removes all weapons from their own bodyguards and the bodyguards of the wealthy and celebs. Then we can talk about reasonable rules for civil society and for us ordinary, rule-following citizens. Historically, only aristocrats could be armed with swords or whatever. God forbid the humble, honest peasants like us have access to weapons too. I saw at Drudge that WalMart is almost sold out of firearms this Christmas. Guys and gals both enjoy a fun new firearm to play with. So do kids. Many if not most American boys remember their first .22 under the Christmas tree. I sure do. My Dad, a US Army vet, university professor, opera- and ballet-lover, taught me everything about it, safety, assembly, cleaning, everything. Good stuff. The smell of that Hoppe's cleaning fluid always takes me back to the farm's kitchen table covered with newspaper with gun-oil stains, just like Proust's madeleine brought him back. I destroyed countless beer bottles and coke cans with that rifle. He also got us a powerful clay target-thrower when we moved into shotguns. Since then, I have enjoyed the challenge of shotgunning more than rifles but I still have a few rifles in the closet. Not sure how many because we never use them. Farm tradition always had a loaded 12 ga. leaning against the kitchen wall like any other farm tool, and a loaded revolver in the kitchen drawer with the pliers and scissors and balls of string. Country-style, I guess. My Mom is/was a champion with skeet and trap, better than me because of her relaxed, serene focus. I love hunting, but only hunters know that shooting guns is only a small part of it. That's why it's not called "shooting." Self-protection? I don't really need it now but we have had problems at the farm where, in a very isolated place far from government control, a firearm would be handy for justice purposes or to civilize an insane Black Bear. Handguns? Well, I figger my concealed carry permit should be enough to deter bad guys because I have never actually carried except in the trunk of the car. Might be amusing for people to wear the carry permit on their Brooks Brothers sports jacket as a deterrent to trouble. Monday, December 10. 2012Glove sizing, plus shooting glovesIn the course of our basement water pipe flood this summer, I seem to have lost my couple of pairs of light shooting gloves. I like to shoot with gloves even when it isn't too cold. Most of the hunting I do tends to be in cold weather so I like to get used to the feel of gloves on a trigger. And I have a very mild but uncomfortable case of Raynaud's. Glovemakers vary in what they mean by L,M, S, etc. Here's a great way to determine your numerical glove size when ordering online. Leather, of course, tends to stretch a bit with use. (That image in the link might need to be reduced before printing) Sierra Trading Post almost always has nice shooting gloves at a meaningful discount. Those are for cool - not frigid - weather. Not just for shooting either - good cool-weather all-purpose gloves. The right gloves for hunting grouse in the snow or ducks in the sleet at 10 degrees F is another topic. The perfect gloves for those things do not exist, as best I have been able to determine. Heavy waterproof gloves, obviously, do not fit rapidly and easily inside a trigger guard, and if you are using a double-triggered old s/s, it's really a problem. Ideas are welcome. I wonder what the Army uses in Afghanistan in the winter. Maybe things like this.
« previous page
(Page 6 of 20, totaling 500 entries)
» next page
|