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I would like a yellow lab puppy.

And time enough.


Out there doing it best I can.
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After the Christmas rush I'm going to treat myself to a brand new straight razor. After 45 years shaving with my Grampa's 100+ year old throat cutter I think I deserve a new one and put the heirloom in the china cabinet. Been shaving with it since I was 14. Gramps would be proud.


Practice safe eating. Always use a condiment.
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The top of my wish list would be good health for my family.

Merry Christmas to everyone on DoubleGun BBS!

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J.R.B., that's a remarkable accomplishment! I've never heard of a lifetime of shaving with a straight razor. At the risk of being too personal, I'm curious to know why you preferred it to safety and electric razors. Easier with a beard, farming away from reliable electricity, family tradition?

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I'm in Texas quail hunting with loads of birds. For Christmas, I'd like to wish for my young bird dogs to quit 'jumping in'.


Socialism is almost the worst.
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Originally Posted By: King Brown
J.R.B., that's a remarkable accomplishment! I've never heard of a lifetime of shaving with a straight razor. At the risk of being too personal, I'm curious to know why you preferred it to safety and electric razors. Easier with a beard, farming away from reliable electricity, family tradition?


The main reason I use a straight is for a close shave. My family genetics have a history of incredibly tough beards. To get a proper Sunday morning Church shave I need what's called a "three pass". Once with the grain, once across the grain, and finally once against the grain. I will admit that as a young boy it was to be a smart ass but it quickly turned into a necessity. Do yourself a favor King, go find a barber that will give you a real hot towel straight razor shave and you will see my point. It's a luxury every man should enjoy at least once in his life.


Practice safe eating. Always use a condiment.
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I told my wife last year that I didn't want or need a thing for Christmas. She kept pestering me so I finally told her " Laura please, I what nothing for Christmas, really". She agreed. Christmas morning, she handed me a present and I again went into my speech about having everything I could ever want or need. She said just open it, so I did. She had taken an old mason jar with a good lid, made a label that read "this is your jar of nothing, Merry Christmas". Today the jar holds oily rags that I use to wipe down the exterior of my guns. My jar of nothing makes me smile and brings me joy every time I use it.

CHRIST is the reason for the season.
Prayers to all with medical issues.

Bill


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world peace......at least until I keel over...then they can blow the whole world to ell....


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That's kinda messed up, gunut. Maybe I should wish for an MRAP instead of an Italia. Easier to get, that's for sure.

I can't wait until I have all the sh*t I want so I can become a full on Jesus man. It's gonna be awesome!

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Originally Posted By: Remington40x
treblig:

I live in southeastern PA and the only pheasants wandering wild I'm aware of are escapees from preserves and they generally don't last long. Talking to a guide on a private club I had the opportunity to shoot at, I was told that the pheasants which escape generally don't last the winter and are always gone before summer. In spite of considerable effort on the part of the club, they haven't had even a hint of success in breeding a carryover population.

PA used to be great pheasant country when I was a teen (back in the late 60s and early 70s). What happened?

Rem

A bunch of things all at once.
1. Bird flu coming out of the chicken houses around Philly in the winters of '81-'83 hit the wild birds hard.
2. Older farmers (the guys who took their GI Bill benefits to buy a farm) aging out and younger ones coming in. The younger ones needed to farm more acres more intensively to make their nut, so
(a) they needed bigger, faster equipment to do it, so out came the fencerows, and where they didn't yank the fencerows they cleaned out a lot of the understory and thinned them so as to not "waste" acreage, and
(b) in the alfalfa fields around where I grew up, they went to an earlier first cutting. June alfalfa was prime bug-hunting country for pheasant chicks and the edges prime nesting territory. Instead of mama pheasant and her chicks fluttering out of the way of the cutter, moving the first cutting up a week or two meant mama pheasant and her nest got chopped up. And
(c) Farmers went from the old-model corn harvesters, which left busted stalks and such in the fields all winter, then plowed them under in spring. The old equipment left a lot of cover/concealment in the stalks and good amount of corn behind. They switched to the kind that chopped the stalks and roots, mixed that into the dirt and left the fields basically bare earth all winter. No cover/concealment and no food.
3. Developers buying out the other farmers and busting up the landscape of 60-120 acre farms, fragmenting the habitat.
4. Edge habitat growing up, manifesting in deer and turkeys showing up where none had been before.
5. Resurgence of hawks.
6. Arrival of coyotes in the mid- to late 70s.

I wouldn't be surprised if there was some sort of pesticide tie-in, too.

There were a lot of birds in '81 when I went overseas. When I got back in '84, there were very few. By '85-'86 it wasn't even worth buying a license.

Last edited by Dave in Maine; 12/19/15 07:05 PM.

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