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Started by tomstopper, February 05, 2016, 09:42:45 PM
Quote from: tomstopper on February 06, 2016, 12:00:17 PMQuote from: Mike Honcho on February 06, 2016, 11:55:49 AMMy buddy and I set up about 100 yds from a single roosted Tom. My friend wanted to video rather than shoot so he set up a few yards from me ,further from the tom.After he flew down I got him to about 40 yds an he hung up so I took the shot.He's flopping on the ground like mad and I get up quickly and start running towards the tom not realizing one leg had gone to sleep.....my buddy got great video of the hunt and me doing a faceplant with my gun.Very embarrassing.Glad I am not the only one this happened to but at least no one witnessed it...
Quote from: Mike Honcho on February 06, 2016, 11:55:49 AMMy buddy and I set up about 100 yds from a single roosted Tom. My friend wanted to video rather than shoot so he set up a few yards from me ,further from the tom.After he flew down I got him to about 40 yds an he hung up so I took the shot.He's flopping on the ground like mad and I get up quickly and start running towards the tom not realizing one leg had gone to sleep.....my buddy got great video of the hunt and me doing a faceplant with my gun.Very embarrassing.
Quote from: OldSchool on February 07, 2016, 10:05:32 AMI've had a hard time picking one, but I guess I'll go with the chip monk "episode" last spring. I was sitting on the ground with my back to a tree watching some birds out about a hundred yards in a field. They had me pinned down and I'd been sitting there for probably two hours.During that time a chip monk was making trip after trip by me at just a couple feet. Once as he passed by, he decided to jump up on the toe of my boot which was pointed straight up, for a look around. I was enjoying the show, when a bird gobbled out in the field. I turned my head slowly to look at the birds, and when I did it scared the chip monk. Instead of jumping off my boot and running away, he opted to dive into the "hole" between my boot and my pant leg. I've always thought chip monks were cute little buggers and I'm certainly not afraid of them, but the sight of it disappearing up my pant leg caused me to forget about the turkeys for a minute. I won't go into details for fear of being laughed of the forum, but in the short time it took me and the chip monk to part company, I spooked the birds and probably every other critter within a quarter mile. Bob
Quote from: born2hunt on February 08, 2016, 09:40:57 PMHooksfan has taken the lead My wife and I were both in tears as I read this to her. Thanks for that one !!!
Quote from: Old Gobbler on February 09, 2016, 07:42:31 AMFunniest thing I ever saw in my life was me and my dad were in the most mosquito infested swamp and my dad whips out a bottle of what he thought was mosquito repellant and starts rubbing it generously all over his face....runs out it was FOX PEE cover scent , omg!!! You had to be there !!!!! The reaction he gave was classic , I heard some all new curse words I didn't even think existed --damn I miss that guy , every time I need a laugh I think of that
Quote from: chcltlabz on February 09, 2016, 01:30:54 PMThese are great, and why is it the best stories always involve crap. I guess we'll always be teenagers.I'll add a crap story to the mix. A friend and I were hunting the mountains of PA. We drove my truck to the top of a ridge and set out to a small spur that usually held a bird, and it did this morning. It was still well before fly down time, and my buddy has to go. I thought I had all my bases covered by reminding him to be as quiet as he could, go away from the bird and for god's sake, stay down wind.Well this bird kept hammering harder and harder and he must have gotten in a hurry. Before I knew it, he was back beside me on the same tree, gun up and at the ready. As we worked this bird I would assume that had hens, he kept asking me "Did you fart? I smell " After a couple episodes of this, we made a move and ended up bumping in to a black bear with a cub, which in and of itself was a pretty funny story. They can be quite protective, so things were very tense until they trotted away, and as always right towards the gobbling bird shutting him down. In the midst of the hunt, my buddy crossed over to being up wind of me and the reason for his question became more apparent. He was smelling himself. In his pre-dawn rush, he had dropped his coveralls and not taken the time to "clear the landing zone" and proceeded to lay a steaming pile in the back of his suit. When he finished processing the paperwork (which were included in the nice package), he pulled up his coveralls, zipped them up and went on about his merry way, newly formed heap and all. We got back to the truck and he took off his camo, and there it was in all its glory dripping off his back, TP, corn and all (why is it there's ALWAYS corn in it, and would this have constituted hunting over bait?)I made him ride down the mountain in the bed of the truck. He stayed mad at me for quite a while over that, but there was NO WAY he was bringing his sewage covered self into my truck cab.