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South Dakota Pheasant Hunting Trip 2011

A couple of weeks ago, I had the great pleasure of going pheasant hunting in South Dakota (near Mitchell) with some family and friends. I had never been out there to hunt pheasants, and this area is known worldwide for having a stupid number of pheasants.

The 3rd week in October is traditionally the pheasant season open in South Dakota, and I have never seen an “Opening Day” so celebrated by locals. Every freaking person I saw had blaze orange on, and a pointer in the back of the truck. Seriously. Everyone.

 

Our 3 day hunt was filled with laughs, ringnecks and beautiful country. I’ve never in my life seen pheasants like that before. Literally dozens of birds would get up at once. Seeing birds running in the cornfields ahead of you was not uncommon, either.

To make things even more surreal to me, the pheasant numbers this year in South Dakota were supposed to be “way down”. When speaking with a local and telling him that we were seeing 200 birds a day, he said “that’s nothing….you should be seeing 500″.

 

Guess we will find out next year! Keep  checking back, as I’ll have a couple of the recipes I use for making pheasants taste delicious!

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StarrFlight FOB Review – Starrflight Archery

Aaron Constantine was kind enough to do this review on the Starrflight FOB’s. He did a great job, and we wish him the best of luck this coming Fall!

I actually came a cross these Starrflight FOBs by accident. I was trying to do some research on a different product, but you all know with the power of the internet one click you could be in the USA and in the very next click you may be in Japan. Don’t worry… this product is made in America, but its just amazing how you stumble across things while your looking for something completely different.

As I mentioned, I was looking for a different product when I happen to find all this information and web sites leading to something called a FOB. If you’re like I was, you are now thinking what the ‘H’ ‘E’ ‘Double Hockey Sticks’ is a FOB? With a couple more clicks of the mouse I learned that FOB stood for Fletching Only Better. Ok, something to do with bow hunting obviously…I was interested! I ended up on their web site starrflight.com and did some more reading and research. The wheels started turning. After spending a fair amount of time on the website I turned to my trusty friend youtube.com, and typed in FOB. I was amazed to find that others had already been using something that was brand new to me and something that I had never even heard of. Watching video after video I became very curious and interested in this product. So I picked up the phone and called. A man by the name of Paul answered. I soon found out that Paul was the inventor of the product. After asking some questions, I told him that I didn’t think I was interested yet, more or less just curious about his product. I told him that I would call him back if I was ever interested in ordering these FOBs.

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Reconyx Hyperfire HC500 Review – Reconyx Trail Cameras


The Reconyx Hyperfire HC500 Trail Camera is a “low-glow” scouting tool that has stupidly awesome battery life, is as dependable as Chuck Norris, and is so easy to setup that even a caveman could do it.

Some of you know that I used to be a big proponent of homebrew (no, not this homebew) trail cameras. And to a certain point, I still am. But, after getting and thoroughly testing ( after literally 10s of thousands of pictures) I am now proud to fly the Reconyx flag.

I want to put a disclosure on this post – I’m not a Reconyx groupie, and will always try to stay away from that. I don’t think that they are perfect for everything and I understand that a camera that cost this much, are certainly not for everyone. I also want to add that I’ve never paid HALF  the asking price of the Reconyx Hyperfire HC500 cameras, because I am on a budget – by budget I mean poor. I scratched and clawed craigslist, eBay and many message boards to find a Reconyx camera that I could afford. It did not happen overnight.

Before I forked over the dough for my Reconyx Hyperfire HC500, I experienced some good things and bad things with homebrews. Overall the experience was, at best – frustrating. I’d have brutal battery life, and few pictures. I’d also have deer spooking from the white flash.

Since my Reconyx installment on our farm, I’ve never once changed the batteries. They’ve been out for 6 months, taken around 30,000 pictures – AND HAVE 85% battery left. Really? Yes really. That’s impressive. My Reconyx HC500 is smaller than my previous homebrews, and hooked the the tree quicker and easier.

When you gotta go, you gotta go!

All in all, I think my Reconyx HC500 is one of, if not the best thing going in the trail camera industry. Incredible dependability, battery life that will outlast 1,000 goldfish, and the simplicity of paper clip.

Reconyx Hyperfire HC500 Top 5 Features – In My Opinion

  1. Dependability- Above all else, this is by far the best thing about this camera. When I set it up and walk away, I KNOW when I return I’m going to have pictures – and lots of them. My homebrew cameras I purchased still gave me that “We’ll see what happens” feeling when walked away from the trail camera setup. I haven’t had that feeling, ever since my Reconyx HC500 camera has been in our woods. The Time Lapse feature allows the camera to take pictures in intervals, throughout the day, so I can place the camera over an area, not just a trail or scrape and get pictures that clue me in on if deer or turkeys are using a certain field. Brilliant!
  2. Simplicity- I am not bright. I graduated college by the thinest of margins. Never once did I get an A in college, (“C’s get degrees!”). But, I could use these Reconyx cameras within minutes of turning them on (no, not like that). Just simple little buttons. No dials or things to twist and break. Just simple, effective design. Beautiful.
  3. Battery Life- Like I mentioned above, it will outlast any other camera I know of, and it’ll probably outlast your old neighbor across the street. Just 12 AA’s and you’re set. How SWEET is that? Just need a couple of 4G SD cards and you’re good for months and months and months……..and months.
  4. Size- This thing is little. The older Reconyx cameras were larger and bulkier, with the same dependability and quality. These obviously still have that – just in a smaller, more concealable package. What’s not to love? It also comes with a nice bungee strap that will setup on any size tree within reason. Simple, silent, and easy. Sounds like the perfect girl. JOKING!
  5. Support And Service- I have not experienced their service and support yet with this camera and it’s doubtful that I’ll ever need to.  But I bought a broken Reconyx RM45 for CHEAP and had it fixed and updated for <$40. And they threw in an new Reconyx hat, to boot!

Overall, Props Reconyx.

Looks more more trail cameras reviews in the future as I love to review cameras.

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