"A late freeze had the mechanism malfunction and dumped 1,500 lbs of corn.
I put that corn back in the feeder, which promptly molded, clumped and quit feeding."
"The following month, I got to crawl inside that aflatoxin mess and scoop it out."
Clark, I am not laughing at you.......more like with you............lol.....I know exactly what you were going through....ha ha
Best of luck to all you Panhandle varmint chasers.
I got a lease east of Mclean last year, saw plenty of deer. Overloaded with does, saw plenty of 8 pt and up. The king stud daddy was a 12 pt. The place is green and the land owner shakes his head and told me he hasn't seen it this green since the early 80s. Have been filling the feeders all year and looking forward to a great season.
Man, I had to mow like crazy to get el ranchito ready for the season. I've owned this place for 12 years now and never seen it this green and thick.
Anyway, got everything mowed and ready, plus a new 600lb Lamco set up and filled to the brim. Hopefully I'll be able to make good on all the prep with a return trip this fall.
I saw a few in Hall County last week when I was there, but not in great numbers. But it was also 100 degrees each day. Need some good weather up north to begin the push south, IMO.
My place is a doe sanctuary and fawn crib, and during the off-season, I usually only get pics of yearling scrub bucks still trying to hang around mama. But during the first week of every September, the boys show up.
Hard to see exact characteristics, but some good potential here.
My place is a doe sanctuary and fawn crib, and during the off-season, I usually only get pics of yearling scrub bucks still trying to hang around mama. But during the first week of every September, the boys show up.
Hard to see exact characteristics, but some good potential here.
Went up for work weekend. Saw few nice animals looking forward to the season! Sorry for the one pic that’s cut out tried to take pic through the binos
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