Re: Old Ski-Doo sleds revived by Russian company
[Re: 30/06]
#7195495
02/25/21 10:49 AM
02/25/21 10:49 AM
|
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 410 Siberia 🐁
Tatiana
"Mushroom Guru"
|
"Mushroom Guru"
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 410
Siberia 🐁
|
Tatiana, what occupies the top of your local food chain? Wolves, Brown Bears, perhaps Sib. Tigers? Do you travel back country armed like most do here in Alaska? Brown bears. They're not as aggressive as some bears in East Siberia, but not all of them are timid, especially in remote areas with little hunting pressure. I'm personally not very fond of bears after a couple of scary encounters. There are too few bear hunters nowadays compared to the Soviet and early post-Soviet times – partly because of severed trade channels and decreased demand for paws and bile to China, and partly because everyone just wants big ungulates.This leads to tragedies every now and then. Generally, men here carry guns when in the forest, women - not so often (owning and carrying guns, especially rifles, is a major headache in Russia, and losing a gun is a nightmare). I don't have a gun and usually just carry a can of bear spray and/or a flare when I go on long walks around the village for mushrooms, berries and fishing, and just try to avoid places where chances of meeting a bear are especially high (such as wildlife trails in narrow places between water bodies). My husband generally carries an Izh-27 shotgun around, less often a rifle. Still, the best protection against bears is a good laika dog - they can stop and/or chase away a bear (most bears prefer to flee). Laikas have strong intrinsic hate towards bears, even laikas who are generally mild-tempered and kind towards other animals. Just to illustrate, this fall our gentle, goofy dog attacked, bit and chased away a medium-sized bear that was feeding on a cranberry patch further up the trail.
Last edited by Tatiana; 02/25/21 11:54 AM.
|
|
|
Re: Old Ski-Doo sleds revived by Russian company
[Re: broncoformudv]
#7196560
02/26/21 08:32 AM
02/26/21 08:32 AM
|
Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 8,464 Manitoba
Northof50
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 8,464
Manitoba
|
Thank you for the insights you are dealing with Tatiana. My brother has 2 Norwegian Elk hounds and it is always an adventure when you go for a walk in the boreal forest here. The different barks tells you what is there and a sharp whistle stops the chase. Research in bear country is always a challenge especially when you are looking for ticks. They actually took a dog down to the zoo to " climatize it to bears " because they were working in the mountains on bear trails looking for ticks and some of the associated diseases. Dogs are good tick collectors as well, 4 legs is better than 2. That dog sure got excited when ever it saw my truck coming, cause another adventure was awaiting. Besides the hour of grooming at the end of the day- looking for ticks. And the next day looking for the missed ones. RIP Banner, Mr Pup.
Some of the people from Germany in the summer over here use their dogs( German wire hairs) for looking for " yellow pine mushrooms "( Suillus sibricus ) they have dog collars with trackers and the dog stops at a site they are about to come up. These are picked and air-expressed overseas for the restaurant trade daily. Pre-exposed do not have the fungus gnats laid in them yet
Last edited by Northof50; 02/27/21 08:30 AM. Reason: posiable name of mushroom
|
|
|
Re: Old Ski-Doo sleds revived by Russian company
[Re: broncoformudv]
#7196747
02/26/21 11:39 AM
02/26/21 11:39 AM
|
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 9,606 Alaska and Washington State
waggler
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 9,606
Alaska and Washington State
|
Speaking of great dogs, I got a West Siberian laika back about 1998. One of very few in north America at that time (maybe there are more now, I don't know). What a great dog to have in the woods. Many people thought it was an Alaskan husky because of it's markings. But laikas don't have the roaming nature of huskies, huskies will take off on their own if you allow them to, whereas a laika will loupe out through the timber, return to you, then loupe out again. They are death on anything that climbs a tree, hunting by nose and sight. My "Bo" (may he RIP) loved hunting squirrels in particular, we were not allowed to hunt marten, only trap them, but Bo didn't know that. He really loved fighting coons, and stray house cats were game as far as he was concerned. In this picture he is eating an aplodontia that happened to wander into his yard. Whether it was squirrels or anything else, he would start by crunching the head to a pulp before swallowing it, then work his way down the body until the tail was the last thing to go down the hatch. He's a little over-weight in this picture.
"My life is better than your vacation"
|
|
|
Re: Old Ski-Doo sleds revived by Russian company
[Re: 30/06]
#7197669
02/27/21 01:53 AM
02/27/21 01:53 AM
|
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 410 Siberia 🐁
Tatiana
"Mushroom Guru"
|
"Mushroom Guru"
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 410
Siberia 🐁
|
~
Last edited by Tatiana; 11/06/22 07:55 AM.
|
|
|
Re: Old Ski-Doo sleds revived by Russian company
[Re: Northof50]
#7197677
02/27/21 03:10 AM
02/27/21 03:10 AM
|
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 410 Siberia 🐁
Tatiana
"Mushroom Guru"
|
"Mushroom Guru"
Joined: Nov 2017
Posts: 410
Siberia 🐁
|
~
Last edited by Tatiana; 11/06/22 07:55 AM.
|
|
|
|
|