Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: Wallace]
#7236709
04/06/21 07:51 PM
04/06/21 07:51 PM
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Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 2,417 7mtns of CENTRAL PA
GROUSEWIT
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 2,417
7mtns of CENTRAL PA
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Yep
1846-1917 Potter county, PA
Last edited by GROUSEWIT; 04/06/21 07:53 PM.
NRALIFER,HUNTER,FURTAKER(PTA)(FTA)(NMTA)(RMEF)
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Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: Wallace]
#7236721
04/06/21 08:07 PM
04/06/21 08:07 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 14,830 SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 14,830
SEPA
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As a PA boy with a camp in Potter County and having frequented many of the same areas Woodcock did, I found it very interesting. I've read it twice so far.
Eh...wot?
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Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: boncoon]
#7236723
04/06/21 08:08 PM
04/06/21 08:08 PM
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Joined: Nov 2013
Posts: 1,604 Batesville, AR
Wallace
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Nov 2013
Posts: 1,604
Batesville, AR
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I'll be hanging around on this one, be interesting to know what firearms he used. He followed cartridge development pretty closely. In a chapter dedicated to cartridges he told a story about obtaining his favorite deer rifle by chance and necessity. It was a .38-40 Winchester.
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Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: Wallace]
#7236727
04/06/21 08:12 PM
04/06/21 08:12 PM
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,902 Nebraska
Trapset
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,902
Nebraska
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www.rtssetter.com for dealer list: RTS SETTER*RTS COLLAPSE A CUBBY *RTS SPEED GAMBREL*SCANDINAVIAN FUR TRAPPER MANUAL*TRAPPERS THANK YOU & XMAS CARDS
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Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: Wallace]
#7236735
04/06/21 08:17 PM
04/06/21 08:17 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 14,830 SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 14,830
SEPA
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Another good book in similar style and set in the same general area is Pioneer Life or Thirty Years a Hunter by Philip Tome.
His elk hunting adventures and live capture of elk are amazing. His relationship with Cornplanter and other Seneca/Iroquois chiefs is very interesting.
Eh...wot?
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Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: Lugnut]
#7236745
04/06/21 08:30 PM
04/06/21 08:30 PM
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Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 445 Maine
andrews1958
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 445
Maine
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As a PA boy with a camp in Potter County and having frequented many of the same areas Woodcock did, I found it very interesting. I've read it twice so far. Any idea how developed Porter County is in the area that he talks about ? He talks about storing his traps out in the woods under trees and stumps. What a find it would be to locate one of his traps.
Last edited by andrews1958; 04/06/21 08:33 PM.
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Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: Wallace]
#7236947
04/07/21 12:34 AM
04/07/21 12:34 AM
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Joined: May 2013
Posts: 4,213 Northern Michigan
J.Morse
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 4,213
Northern Michigan
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I read the book way back when I was a pup. Hard to imagine the countryside the way it was back then.
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Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: andrews1958]
#7237047
04/07/21 07:11 AM
04/07/21 07:11 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 14,830 SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 14,830
SEPA
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As a PA boy with a camp in Potter County and having frequented many of the same areas Woodcock did, I found it very interesting. I've read it twice so far. Any idea how developed Porter County is in the area that he talks about ? He talks about storing his traps out in the woods under trees and stumps. What a find it would be to locate one of his traps. No doubt that the area is more developed than during Woodcock's times although it is still one of the most sparsely populated areas in Pa. He would have lived through the height of the logging boom in northcentral Pa which brought in lots of people and saw huge tracks of land clear cut. Today there are still large tracks of land privately owned by timber companies (properly managed timber these days) and large tracks of state forest and state game lands in the area. Those areas are not so different from when Woodcock roamed them. Coming across one of his traps sure would be a great find.
Eh...wot?
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Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: Wallace]
#7237160
04/07/21 09:23 AM
04/07/21 09:23 AM
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Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 3,388 central arkansas
the Blak Spot
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 3,388
central arkansas
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Good book! Woodcock reminds me of Virgil Lynch(he used a .40-60 or 82 ?)
the just shall live by faith
member FTA, NRA, SWARFTA, EAFT 1776 - the year we told a tyrant we weren't to be under a dictator Caveat ater macula
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Re: "50 Years a Hunter and Trapper "
[Re: Wallace]
#7237203
04/07/21 10:48 AM
04/07/21 10:48 AM
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Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 8,810 Green County Wisconsin
GREENCOUNTYPETE
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 8,810
Green County Wisconsin
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I've just finished the book with the above title. It is a compilation of the writings of E.N. Woodcock. He was a fur trapper and market hunter in the late 1800s and up to 1910. Every time i hear an argument about the best deer rifle i think about how men like Woodcock nearly wiped the landscape clean of deer with anemic little black powder cartridges. He hated high-powered cartridges.
Anyone else read this book? they nearly wiped the landscape clean because they didn't have to do it in 7 days they hunted any time they saw game not the hand full of days . they also didn't sit in a tree for 5 days watching wolves pass them by, nor worry about every 5 and 10 acre parcel being owned by some one else. and everyone hunted or allowed people to hunt. they worked together during deer season 8 and 12 man drives move deer , you get good at shooting them on the run , but close they hunted for meat and not trophies people complain about deer in their gardens now , eating their shrubs , used to be they just shot the deer and canned it up that deer never ate their garden again. my great grandfather was known for taking meat deer while working the orchards he thought 22 hornet was the best deer gun around it was flat to 100 yards you could reach clear across the orchard and put a bullet right in the neck and they fell over . light , not too long , not too loud WI is a great modern example of being able to hunt deer out , in 2003 the state started offering unlimited doe tags for every doe you shot you got a buck tag, season lasted October to January it was getting so that unless you were near a bunch of 5 and 10 acre house plots you didn't even see a deer. then people realized , the DNR is never going to thin out deer where they need to be reduced. metro areas , and 5&10 acre house plot areas the DNR stopped the program of 4 doe tags a day for free with your base license and the deer started coming back to other areas and fairly quickly. we are almost back to what we were seeing for deer in 2004
America only has one issue, we have a Responsibility crisis and everything else stems from it.
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