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genec

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Posts posted by genec

  1. Finally got a turkey this morning after 3 days.

    18.77 pounds, 10.1/2” beard, and short spurs - 15/16” & 7/8”.

    However, it was the easiest turkey I’ve got in a long time.

    I set up along a wheat field edge along a woods where I thought they might be roosting.

    After it started getting light a bird started gobbling over my right shoulder less than 50 yds away.

    After gobbling for over 20 minutes or so he flew down just 30 yards in front if me….game over!!

  2. Here is the jerky recipe I use - I got it from the OOD magazine web forum many years ago.

    I have a 3-rack jerky tray set that I got from Cabela's, and I do it on my 4-burner BBQ (because my wife hates me smelling up the house doing it in the oven), with only one burner on low to medium - takes about 5-6 hours, and I rotate the racks 180 degrees, and bottom to top every 30 minutes to get consistent results.

     

    Called T-birds jerky

    Ingredients
    - 4 pounds round steak (I do it with turkey or venison)
    - 4 tablespoons onion powder 
    - 1 1/3 teaspoons black pepper 
    - 1 1/3 teaspoons garlic powder 
    - 2 pinches salt 
    - 1 teaspoon dry Italian-style salad dressing mix 
    - 1 cup Worcestershire sauce 
    - 1 cup soy sauce 
    - 1 teaspoon hot pepper sauce 

    Directions
    1.    Cut meat into strips no thicker than 1/4 inch. In a large bowl, mix together onion powder, pepper, garlic powder, salt and Italian seasoning. Stir in Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce and pepper sauce. Place meat into a container, and combine with marinade. Cover, and refrigerate 24 hours. (i like marinating it for 2days).
    2.    Place oven rack on the highest level. Place aluminum foil on bottom of oven to catch drips. Preheat oven to 150 degrees F (65 degrees C). 
    3.    Insert round toothpicks through the tops of the strips of meat, and hang them from the oven rack. Bake in preheated oven for 4 hours, or until dried to desired consistency. 
     

  3. I just want to see some dry weather because I hunt the family farm near Cayuga, and that Haldimand clay is a gooey, sticky mess to have to walk through when its wet!  When its wet I try to stick to the 3 hay fields on the farm just because its easier walking thru grass than muddy grain fields, but my favourite opening day spot is against a tree in a grain field south of the main bush roost trees.  And I have hunted them in all kinds of weather except thunderstorms.  More than once I have started a morning hunt, only to have to make a run for the car because it started thundering, and I’m carrying a nice steel “lightning rod” (gun)!!

     

  4. Bill, that map isn't fully accurate for their northernmost range in Ontario - they have ranged further north than that map indicates.  Back in 2007 we were moose hunting 1 hour north of Blind River, and one of our guys saw a hen turkey on a game trail in that area. There is an established flock on St Joseph Island, and many of these birds have been found north of the island on the mainland as well.  The bird our guy saw was probably a migrant from the St Jo flock.

     

  5. Bill, i had the same canoe as you do, and I used a12 volt deep cycle in it for years with my Minn Kota 30 Lb.  I ran extension cable from the front section of the canoe to the motor to balance out the weight, and it worked great.  Just ran the cable down that central keel groove in the floor.

    I’m using the 12 volt in my kayak now with that motor.

    i would like to get a lithium for the reduced weight in my yak, but the price is still atrocious on them.

    i use a small lithium in it to power my Lowrance hook 2 fish finder.

  6. Another option is do what I did and switch gas push mower to self-propelled electric.

    So nice now to just walk behind it and let it do the work!

    From the size of your lawn you would need one with 2 batteries.

  7. Their cheapest plan is $25 per month, and, if you check their website, they will often give an extra $25 topup if you make a $100 payment, so $125 for $100.  I only used my phone for calls and texts, and never had any service issues with them, and good area coverage…..just rare signal drops occasionally when driving, but didn’t happen often.

     

     

     

  8. Speakout through 7-11 is a cheap way to go.

    you just buy their SIM card, then you can pay-as-you-go….you can top up for $25, $50, or $100 whenever you need to.

    They piggyback on the Rogers network, so pretty extensive coverage Canada-wide.

    I used them for several years before we switched to Virgin.

  9. I went to the Ft. Erie show.

    Ordered my kayak trailer, and bought some supplies from Bruce’s wife and from Top Notch Tackle.

    They showed me a neat hook that keeps ur drop shot bait perfectly level, so ordered some of them.

    Other than those things, I came away feeling disappointed in the rest of the show…seemed like a lot of used things.

    But getting my yak trailer, which was the key thing I went there for.

     

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