Posts Tagged ‘humor’

25
May

Baby Mallard Duck Egg Stalker

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

duck eggsFor those of you that weren\’t reading my blog last year, I was stalking baby mallard duck eggs.  For weeks I saw the male and female hanging between our house and a neighbor\’s house.  Finally we found that mother duck found the perfect bedding spot for her eggs.

And she sat.

And sat.

For weeks.

And according to several online sites about mallards, her cute little babies were to hatch within the week.

Until …

A Dirty Rotten Nasty Fox ate them.

I was horrified and heartbroken when I saw the photos from our trail cam.

So this year I\’ve been waiting on their return.   I heard them one morning a couple of weeks ago and saw them in a neighbors yard once. As of last week, no sign of them at all. I\’ve been searching and searching in our yard, a few neighbor\’s yards, driving my car slowing around the neighborhood, secretly peeking in neighbors bushes in hopes of locating them. No luck.

Until…

I was minding my own business on Facebook when my husband walked in and said, “Marty (neighbor across the street) has duck eggs in his bushes.”

Me: Are you kidding? Why oh why would she lay her eggs over there. That\’s right in the path of a running fox. His yard isn\’t fenced. We have a yard with a fence and lots of bushes to protect her. Why in the world would she lay them over there?

Mark: Jody, I better not catch you over there peeking in his bushes.

Me:  Don\’t you have somewhere to go?  I think you need more grass seed.

911 what\’s your emergency: I think we have a peeping tom. There\’s a crazy lady dressed in a black sweatsuit with her hood on peeking in our bushes. Yes you heard me right.  Not our window. Our bushes.

Maybe if I wear camouflage no one will notice me.

Have a good day all … I have sweet little baby duck eggs to find. And think I better practice my fence jumping skills.

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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I didn\’t catch a shark but that is what 2-year-old Ella from St. Francis, MN said when she caught her first fish, a 20 lb muskie, on her cute little pink barbie fishing pole.  I luv it!

“I caught a shark!” Sounds like something I would swear I caught. Even if you\’d swear it was a little tiny baby bluegill.

I love a good kids fishing story especially when it involves using a pink barbie fishing pole.

Thanks to Ben at Ben G Outdoors for sharing the link.

And word on the street is there\’s a grown man in TX running around fishing with a pink barbie pole.

Have a good day all … I need to go find where Mark hid my cute little pink barbie pole.

Link and more on the story of Ella\’s shark can be read at My Fox Twin Cities.

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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19
May

Bowler Down

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

I\’m not a bowler.  I\’ve never been on a bowling team, owned a bowling shirt or my own bowling bowl.  I\’d drop it on my toe.  I\’ve only gone bowling for the fun of it all.  Like for midnight bowling … with drinks.  Except this past Saturday no drinks were involved when my sister and I took my niece bowling.

Addison loved bowling …

And I forgot my camera so I used my cell phone.

I wanted to get a good action picture of our little bowler to send to her Mom so without thinking and never hearing my sister yelling, “DON\’T STEP OVER THE BLACK LINE” … umm … well … I stepped over the black line.

Dear inexperienced bowlers;  Never EVER step over the black line.

As soon as I stepped over the black line, the thing beeped. That is to let you know you are out of bowling bounds and you shouldn\’t cheat.  Except I think it should have a speaker that says …

DO NOT STEP OVER THE BLACK LINE OR YOUR @$$ WILL WIPE OUT.

And that is where my @$$ fell.

Have you ever stepped over the black line?  It\’s like a whole new world over there.  Slippery when wet doesn\’t even compare. That @hit is greased up and I couldn\’t get up.

I\’ve fallen and can\’t get up.

Is that statement ever true.

But I seriously couldn\’t.

I couldn\’t even crawl.

There\’s a reason those lanes look shiny.  And it isn\’t from the lights.

You\’d think my sister would run to my rescue and help pull me over that stupid black line, but her @ss sat there laughing.

Poor Addison said, “Auntie JoJo can we go home now.”

Auntie Jojo, “Sure baby just as soon as I crawl out of grease land.”

I obviously was concerned about getting that once in a lifetime photo because when I looked back at my pictures I saw this …

Apparently I was able to snap a picture on my way down.

And apparently by the bruise on my hip I was more concerned about not breaking my phone than my hip.

911 can we help you: “Um hi.  This is the bowling alley, some stupid crazy lady just stepped over the black line and fell and thinks she broke her hip.”

Have a good day all … I think I need to get the medical alert thingy for seniors.

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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6
May

When Seagulls Attack

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

We live in the big city on a cul-de-sac.  If I were to walk out my front door, I can get to our main town park in minutes and to the grocery store in about 10 minutes.  That is if I walk.  But I eat cupcakes.  So I drive.  And it\’s faster.

I normally wake at 5:00 a.m. grab a cup of coffee and read emails.  It is always so quiet this time of morning with only the sounds of the robins and most recently a few mallards.  Pray for me that they lay eggs in our bushes again this year.  Thank you.

But yesterday morning I was in dreamland living on a beach somewhere not realizing I was listening to the sounds of seagulls.

Let me take you back to a recent conversation with my husband;

Me:  Mark we need to get a garbage can instead of leaving bags on the curb.

Mark:  If we get a garbage can it will attract mice and raccoons.

Me:  Ok.

I\’m easy that way because … well … I don\’t touch the garbage.

Back to yesterday morning.

I was reading emails in lala land dreaming of never eating cupcakes again so I can fit in that string bikini … with a nice golden tan … painted toenails … and sipping a pina colada listening to the sounds of the seagulls.

Until it turned into the horrifying sound of wild birds fighting.

You don\’t normally see this around here unless you\’re at the mall throwing french fries out your car window.  Not that I do that or anything.

Did you notice my neighbor\’s garbage is neatly set at the curb in cans?  But ours is … well … just throw on the curb waiting for a seagull to enjoy a leftover steak bone.  And they were fighting over the leftover steak bone like a bunch of wild dogs.

Being the “I love critters and want to hug them” kind of girl … I was worried they might choke on the steak bone.

So I handled the situation like I always do …

I call my husband to deal with it.

Me:  Mark, there are about 500 seagulls in our cul-de-sac fighting over a steak bone from our garbage that isn\’t in cans.  If we had a garbage can we wouldn\’t have this problem.  But we don\’t.  So now I feel obligated to run out and chance a seagull knowing he might choke on your steak bone.  Yea that\’s right.  Bird attack.  In my pajamas.

911 what\’s your emergency:  The crazy neighbor lady is out front again except this time she\’s chasing seagulls in her pajamas and they just attacked her.

Because that\’s what will happen you know.

Mark:  Jody, I\’m at work.

Me: K, bye.

And then the seagulls flew off into the sunset with their steak bone.

Have a good day all … I\’m off to buy a garbage can.

P.S. – When my husband reads this tonight this will be his exact response, “Damn my grass looks good.”  While I\’m standing there with bandages all over my head.

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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We\’ve been vacationing at Barkley Lake, Kentucky for about 5 years.   One of the reasons we continue to go back is the fishing.  We\’ve always managed to bring home our share of bluegill, crappie, yellow strippers and catfish.  Between my husband and I, on average, we catch about 100 fish a day. We\’ve never had a problem catching fish.  But this year the guys, Mark and Troy, decided to hire a guide to possibly find a few new spots and learn a few new tips.

So we hired Billy Joe Boitnott that was highly recommended by the locals.

And I had no idea what to expect but I was put on the boat with Billy Joe and it was fishing heaven.

Let\’s take a look back at my fishing history:

  • My 1st year of fishing:  My husband took care of everything but I needed to learn if I wanted to be fishing chick angler of the year.
  • My 2nd year of fishing:  I touched worms and baited my own hook.  Because one day I\’ll be fishing chick angler of the year that doesn\’t need a man baiting her hook.
  • My 3rd year of fishing:  I could rig up my own pole in case of brush hangups.  Or tree hangups.  Or my own hair hangups.  No need for a man on this boat.  I\’m fishing chick angler of the year.
  • My 4th year:  I just can\’t take a fish off the hook but I\’ll take pictures with it.  Posing as fishing chick angler of the year.
  • My 5th year:  Oh Billy Joe where have you been for the past 4 years?

I sat in a chair on the front of the boat like princess fishing chick angler of the year and never had to move.  He baited my hook, fixed my line, baited my hook, took my fish off, fixed my line, fixed my line and fixed my line.

And he called me cute pet names …  Sassy Susie, Sassy Jo, Sassy Jane and Sassy Frassy.

And I\’m not sure why?  ‘Cause I\’m not Sassy.  I was very proper, polite and well-mannered.  I was the perfect lady and I made sure not to use one bad word.  I had a talk with myself before we went not to use bad words.  No bad words Jody.   It wouldn\’t be ladylike.

But then I heard Billy Joe say, “you monkey” a few times.  And just when I lost that monster 10 lb crappie I loudly blurted out …

“Y O U      M O T H E R     M O N K E Y.”

Have a good day all …  I wonder if Billy Joe would paint my toenails next time?

Who needs the title fishing chick angler of the year being all fishing independent when you can be princess fishing chick angler of the year thanks to Billy Joe.

~~~~~~~~~~

If you\’d like to hire a guide on Barkley or Kentucky Lake, I would highly recommend Billy Joe Boitnott.  For more information and if you\’d like his number you can email me at:  jody @ thehunterswife . net.

Thank you all and thank you Billy Joe!

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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22
Apr

To Tinkle In The Woods I\’ll Go

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

If you\’ve been reading my blog for any amount of time you\’ve probably come across a comment or two I\’ve made about never tinkling in the woods.  I\’m not that kind of outdoors girl.  A squirrel might see me.  But after an incident at the marina last week, well, um, lets just say I\’d rather a squirrel saw me.

It was a very hot week of fishing.  85 degrees hot. Being on a boat in the middle of the lake with the sun beating down on you feels like 95 degrees.  Without making a move, you\’ve already worked up a good sweat.  Which means your clothes are wet and stuck to you.

My husband decided he needed more minnows so we headed to the marina.  We pulled up at the dock and I decided I better use the ladies room.  So I pranced across the dock and up the pier to the restaurant wishing everyone a good morning along the way.

On my way out, I wished more fellow anglers and marina workers a good morning and climbed back into the boat.  As we pulled away I noticed several workers going about their business on the dock, people having coffee on the upper level of the marina restaurant and I thought about the people that had a beautiful view to the water while dining in the restaurant.

We finally made our way to a brush pile with our fresh minnows and my boat duties kicked in.  I bent over and dropped the anchor in the water.  I bent over and set the minnows out for easy access.  I bent over and handed my husband a minnow.  And I bent over,  grabbed my pole and started fishing while standing.

A short time later, another boat anchored behind us to fish a separate brush pile.  We made small talk with the older couple and then I went about my fishing business.  Bending over to get a minnow, bending over to pick up my minnow I dropped and bending over to pick up my squirmy little minnow again.  After about an hour, our elder friends left.

You know when it\’s 85 degrees out, your clothes are stuck to you, you\’re swatting bugs in fear of getting bit and you start itching?  Well I was all over the boat swatting and itching when I felt something biting the back of my leg.  I turned my body to give the back of my leg a good itch when I noticed it.

You know when you\’re the girl that doesn\’t tinkle in the woods and is in fear of bathroom germs so you cover the toilet like you\’re wallpapering the thing in case your squat fails?

You know when it\’s 85 degrees and your ass is as sticky as wallpaper?

And your squat failed for that brief second just long enough for a 5 feet long piece of toilet paper to stick to your ass.

You know when you bend over 100 times in a boat and you\’re husband never notices that you have  5 feet of toilet paper hanging out your sticky wallpapering ass?

You know when you\’re on a boat and an older couple is fishing behind you and they never once said, “Excuse me hon, but I think you have something hanging out your panties?”

You know when you\’re sitting there having flash backs of where it happened, when it happened, and for the love of prancing across the marina like you\’re super TP girl, who in the world saw you?

Oh help me.

And then you do what every wife would do after sitting on a boat with their husband for 12 hours a day…

“Mark? Grr Mark.  Grr.  As many times as I bend over in this stupid boat, how did you not see 5 feet of toilet paper hanging down to my ankle?”  I went on and on.  Blah blah blah.  Guys at the marina saw me.  Other anglers saw me.  Blah blah blah.  OMG blah blah blah.  I don\’t even know what I was rambling but it was a good wife ramble for a good 15 minutes.

And all he had to say was, “Jody,  I was fishing.”

I am never using the marina bathroom again.

Mariana worker:  Where you going?

TP super girl:  To use the ladies room.

Mariana worker:  It\’s that way.

TP super girl:  Oh no it\’s not.  It\’s behind tree number 3.

Have a good day all … to tinkle in the woods I\’ll go.

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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14
Apr

Eating Crow with Springing Teal

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

When I announced I wanted to take up Shooting Sports as a hobby, it went over like a fart in church. I can still smell the distinct odor the affair raised—and it wasn\’t gunpowder. I heard the Doubting Thomases and the harshest critics say: ‘JoAnna Zurinsky, if you ever manage to blast a clay bird out of that sky, it will be the day monkeys fly out of our butts!\’   Now call it what you will, Daddy says it\’s a case of good-old fashion German Stubbornness, I call it American Woman Resolve. I was going to hit a clay bird. I was going to do it regardless of whatever anyone said.  Daddy and I went out to the field in the back of our barn, and he threw the clays.  I took his 12ga Remington pump shotgun, and blasted the smithereens out of a bird, first try!  It felt so good. I did it again, and again that afternoon.  Sure I missed my fair share, but I didn\’t focus on what I was doing wrong, I only focused on what I was doing right. I was having fun, and I was hooked!

And Daddy? Well, he was shocked! My mom, who knew all along that I would do it, bagged up little pieces of clay birds for me to take home as a trophy to show my better, and sometimes un-believing half, Larry, as proof that monkeys sometimes do fly. And out of the strangest places!  When I got home, I put the baggie on the table, Larry rolled on the floor laughing.  ‘What?\’ I asked.  Larry blurted out, with Chardonnay gurgling through his nostrils (he was that amused):  ‘Hand thrown birds are a great deal different than what you\’ll experience at a Gun Club with trap-machine thrown birds!\’  Undaunted, I soon got my chance to try Sporting Clays and Skeet.

I asked for a membership to the local gun club for my birthday that year, instead of jewelry—and got it, along with an offer for a full-on psychiatric evaluation.  I started going to the gun club every chance I got; with friends, relatives and any country man or woman who lend me their time and ears, so I could yell: “PULL!”  I befriended a couple of the members, and the nicknames along with the clays, started flying:  JoAnnie Oakley, 12ga Lady, Clay Slayer, The Crapshoot Kid and my personal, but somehow annoyingly favorite, Ram-Jo. These were not all compliments- most of them cute, but condescending in nature.

At the gun club that I discovered Shooting Sports is wonderful fun, it is very competitive, and a boys club.  One particular Sunday, my dad\’s friends from work were watching me at the Springing Teal stand, and bet a barbecue lunch on the odds that I would not hit single high or low clay out of the brush. I took on the bet. Now, I did not have the money to buy lunch for any of these fellas, but I couldn\’t let that stop me! Not a chance! I was going to stand my ground, if I was going to be wrong I was going to at least be bold about it. The taunting began.  ‘Hey Ram-Jo, you gonna slay that Springing Teal today?  You got a reputation to keep at this club! As long as you\’re here, the clays are safe!\’  Daddy looked at me, and I looked at him, the stubbornness and resolve creeping out of me, a sly smile crossed my face. We looked at Earl and Joe and yelled: Game On!  With Daddy as my cheerleader, and pulling for me in the literal and figurative sense, I knew I could lick the Springing Teal stand. That day, there would be a thing such as a free lunch, but just desserts as well!

I got my clays, and Joe and Earl just stood at the bottom of the stand, jaws on the ground. I came over and they stammered out: “we guess we owe y\’all lunch, and Crapshoot Kid, well, we\’re kinda sorry.\’  I took out my ear protection, and said: “Guys, I have my ear protection in. It silences the loudest of critics!\’  Lunch was good. We were all sitting around, and Daddy asked: “Is this the best barbecue you\’ve ever eaten or what?!” I smiled and said, “Dad, the chicken sort of tastes like Springing Teal, and I think that Joe and Earl\’s ribs must taste like Crow.”

Till the next time: Shoot Straight and Aim High!

J.Z. Zurinsky- My Bullet Points

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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We don\’t have porcupines where I live. We also don\’t have many bears, so when the occasional one is spotted, the 6 o\’clock news reports about the posse that stalked the poor bruin through a ritzy neighborhood.  So if I want to hunt bears or see porcupines, I go somewhere that seems exotic to me, like coastal British Columbia.

Upon arriving in a B.C. bear camp years ago, I noticed all the guides had porcupine quills in the tops of their caps. Minutes later, as my hunting partner, our guide, and I headed out for the afternoon\’s hunt, a porcupine waddled across the road in front of us. Snatching my cap from my head, the guide ran for the porcupine and slapped its back with the crown of the cap. And that\’s how they all got quills in their caps and I became one of the guys. Nice.

A few days later, we were on a logging road on the side of a mountain that felt like the top of the world. Although there was leftover snow on the ground, it was a warm, shirt-sleeves day. My hunting partner spotted a large black bear about 300 yards away. It was a shootable distance for him, and he had a gun with enough oomph to do the job from that range, but between us and the bear were a vertical rock cliff, a patch of thick alders loved by grizzlies, a wide creek raging with the waters of the spring thaw, and a large snowbank. Getting the bear back to the logging road looked difficult, if not impossible. He shot it anyway, and we started plotting its retrieval.

The route would be circuitous, through, around, and over the obstacles between us and the bear. Without the aid of GPS units, radios, or any other electronics, we realized just staying on course would be challenging. So the plan was that I would stay on the mountain where I could see both the bear and my fellow hunters and direct them as needed. How did I get so lucky?!

I watched the scene below as the two men navigated their way to the bear, occasionally pointing left or right to get them back on track. Finally, they reached the dead bear, and the guide turned to me with both arms stretched overhead, waving in a criss-cross manner to let me know they had found the bear.  I acknowledged him with the same signal – and suddenly pain seared through my head. I had bumped my hat while waving, and a porcupine quill had nailed my scalp.

“&$%@#*!!!” I yelled, reaching for the brim of my hat to remove it. The cap wouldn\’t budge. I tugged a little harder, but the pain was worse by the second. My head hurt, my ears throbbed, every individual tooth in my mouth pounded. I sat in the logging road with hands on each side of my hat, tugging firmly but gently. It was nailed to my head. I reached for the quills and thought I could somehow figure out which ones were pinned to me.  Every one I touched made the pain worse and still didn\’t budge.

Finally, there was no choice but to be more aggressive, like ripping a bandage off quickly. With both hands, I pulled my hat as hard as I could. This time it came loose, every little fish hook quill end attached to a chunk of bloody scalp. I later counted 84 bloody quills.

I dropped my head into my hands, my fingers massaging my aching scalp, my eyes clenched. Soon I realized my arms felt strangely warm, and I opened my eyes to find my hands and sleeves soaked in blood. My head was gushing, and I needed to stop the bleeding. I recalled that just down the logging road was a small waterfall, the runoff of the spring thaw. I walked there, blood streaming into my face and over my clothes, and stuck my head in the icy water.  It worked; in a few minutes, the bleeding finally stopped, and I washed the blood from my hair.

I looked down at myself, seeing that my shirt was a bloody, sticky mess. My hunting partners were still at least a couple of hours from returning. I could see for miles, but there was (probably) no one around to see me. So I took off my shirt, washing it in the waterfall, streams of blood running down the roadside. I rinsed it until the water ran clean, then wrung it out. I found a sunny spot and spread it out on a rock to dry.

In the meantime – combless and mirrorless – I arranged and fluffed my hair with my fingers, trying to get it dry. My shirt eventually dried enough to wear, and I got myself dressed and back together. Minutes later, my partners emerged from the ravine, loaded with bear, and there I sat on the big rock where they had left me.

I could only imagine how shocked my hunting partners must be when they returned to find me in such a mess, especially after they had climbed down a rock cliff, crossed thick alders, waded a raging creek, trudged through a snow slide, field-dressed and skinned a bear, and returned through the same hazards with their first load of bear hide and carcass.

But they didn\’t say a word! “OK, they\’re excited about the bear,” I thought. “Soon they\’ll finish telling their story and will notice.” Not a word. Nada. Nobody noticed.

I guess I could easily attribute their negligence of my ordeal to their being men. I could call them inattentive and self-centered. In reality, they didn\’t notice because, after a week in bear camp, a waterfall shower and mirrorless grooming didn\’t hurt my appearance at all.

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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13
Apr

Taking A Mud Bath At Midnight

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

“Mom, I\’m getting another whiff of you,” complained my son, Alec, as he sat on the ice chest located in the middle of our canoe. I sat in the front of the canoe with trusty gig in hand, while my husband practiced the fine art of poling our craft into sloughs and other good froggy areas on the Meramec River.

An “eau-dee-slew” scent rose from my mud-clogged pores, a result of my second tumble into the muddy waters of the Maramec. We\’ll get to that part later.

We met on the banks of the river that evening with local outdoor enthusiasts Bill and Charlene Cooper, and their son, Cody. At that time, they hosted the television show “Outdoors with Bill and Pete,” which ran in the Columbia, Mo., very-early-Saturday-morning television market.

The Coopers, as usual, put us to shame with their state-of-the-art, hi-tech trolling motor on a camouflaged, flat-end canoe. They carried a precision-cut, water-jet crafted gig and sat on camo comfort seats. They brought high-powered lights that were probably capable of signaling distress signs to aircraft.

We brought our previously-owned canoe, a homemade gig, an ice chest for me to sit on, and my husband\’s Maglight®. We carried two free mesh trash bags from the Conservation Department for frog storage.

Since this was our son\’s first time to gig, Bill and my husband gave him a quick primer on gigging before we embarked. From a distance the two men looked like two defensive-line coaches in the huddle, telling Alec how to hit and where to stick.

We put in after sunset, and soon parted company. The Coopers trolled on ahead, while we stayed behind – hung up on a rock – spinning \’round and \’round. My husband\’s homemade pole lacked a few feet of length, making it very difficult for him to maneuver the canoe. He finally got into a rhythm of poling and we were off. And, we are not even going to get into the short pole comments I heard that evening, because after all, this is a family blog, right Jody?

To Alec\’s credit, he gigged the first frog of the evening perfectly. A nice, swift clean stab, and the frog was ours.

The first tumble of the evening happened without notice. Usually, you get a second or two and you realize what\’s going to happen. This was not the case. My husband shifted his weight in the back of the canoe, and my ice chest shifted quickly to the same side. We both fell out to the left side of the canoe, splashing Alec.

He just laughed. We complained a little about bruising our tailbones, but other than that, and the fact that we were both wet to our necks, we were fine.

We worked the bank some more. We got into a slough, where the stink rose from the mud. The frogs sang sweetly in there. My concentration level had spiked to high mode now, and I worked at keeping the beam of light on a particularly handsome bullfrog while my husband moved the canoe closer and closer, and Alec prepared for the strike.

Before Alec could even move the gig, I leaned over a little too far to my right and “plop,” I went for a swim in the thickest, gooiest, most obnoxious-smelling mud I\’ve ever experienced.

Alec and my husband suffered a moment of shock, and when they found out that I wasn\’t hurt – just stuck in the mud – they started laughing. Well, I had to admit, I looked like a monster from the lagoon.

We decided that it might be better if I gigged for a while. Having gigged for fish on the Osage, this frog gigging stuff came easy. Alec suffered from sitting downwind of my new scent.

For the next two hours, we worked the banks and I gigged a couple and missed a lot. Our collection of frogs would occasionally find a way out of the sacks. That made life interesting for a while, as the guys tried to catch the frogs.

Alec wound up kicking one out of the canoe because it landed, “plop,” on his left foot, setting off his amphibious-kicking reflex.

We came off the river at about midnight. From my changing room behind a bush, I changed into a chambray shirt and a beach-towel skirt. Alec commented that he hoped we would not be in a car accident on the way home. His concern reminded me of a mother\’s interest in her children\’s choice of underwear in case of a quick trip to the ER, except he worried because I did not have any underwear.

At 1:30 a.m., as my son and husband cleaned the frogs on the back stoop, my son commented that he was glad we didn\’t catch our limit. But, hey, we really caught our limit, and then some, of fun and of making memories.

© Barbara Baird, Women\’s Outdoor News

Bill Cooper and Barbara Baird.

Bill\’s tines have broken off his gig! This was an earlier trip on a different river, and we also fell into the river on this trip, but it was Bill\’s fault.

Photo by:  Jason Baird

Cartoon image by Nic Frising, who illustrated Barb\’s column in The Ozarks Mountaineer.

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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camo

I know it\’s not deer hunting season or any where close to it right now, but I thought I would share with you a little secret I have learned over the years to help keep you warm on those cold mornings and evenings in the Tree stand.

First you will need a full body hunting suit (not one with bibs and a jacket).

Next thing you will need is an appetite. (Do you see where I\’m going yet?)

Now a bowl of homemade chili with extra beans (store bought will work too but not as well)

If it is going to be a cold morning make sure to eat your extra bean chili right before you go to bed (or for breakfast if you want) and if it is going to be a cold evening in the stand make sure to eat another bowl or two for lunch that day. (You have to see where I\’m going with this now)

When you get up in your stand you have a built in heater.

Here is the secret make sure you are quiet don\’t let any loud one\’s slip out. If you do you might scare the deer away.

I guess if there are geese in the area the deer wouldn\’t know the difference. Right?…

Oh wait I forgot about the smell………….

Dang – No wonder I never get any deer when it\’s cold out.

Ben – Ben G Outdoors

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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